August 18, 2010
U.S.
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
REPORT REVEALS
MAJOR CUTS TO SCHOOL
SAFETY BUDGETS
Eliminated federal
school safety program
and local budget cuts
raise back-to-school
safety questions for
parents, expert says
[CLEVELAND] --- A new U.S Department of Education report shows the elimination of a major federal school safety grant program, combined with local education budget cuts, has created a 'perfect storm' climate for the upheaval of school violence prevention and security programs, according to Kenneth S. Trump, a national school safety expert.
"School safety administrators can't rob Peter to pay Paul because Peter's budget has also been cut. The drug prevention coordinator or school security director can't ask the superintendent to replace thousands of lost federal school safety dollars with money from other programs because local district budgets are being shaved to the bare bone, too," said Trump, of Cleveland-based National School Safety and Security Services.
[CLEVELAND] --- A new U.S Department of Education report shows the elimination of a major federal school safety grant program, combined with local education budget cuts, has created a 'perfect storm' climate for the upheaval of school violence prevention and security programs, according to Kenneth S. Trump, a national school safety expert.
"School safety administrators can't rob Peter to pay Paul because Peter's budget has also been cut. The drug prevention coordinator or school security director can't ask the superintendent to replace thousands of lost federal school safety dollars with money from other programs because local district budgets are being shaved to the bare bone, too," said Trump, of Cleveland-based National School Safety and Security Services.
A June, 2010, internal
report by the U.S.
Department of
Education found schools
nationwide are reducing
and eliminating student
drug prevention
programs, reducing
behavior intervention
specialists, cutting
school security and
school-based police
officers, and not
providing professional
development to staff on
prevention, security,
and crisis preparedness
best practices.
"The elimination of
several significant
funding sources (e.g.,
Title IV, Safe and
DrugāFree Schools) from
both national and local
budgets has also
resulted in the
elimination of entire
programs that provided a
framework for school
safety and prevention
efforts,"
according to the report
produced by The Center
for School Preparedness
of the U.S. Department
of Education's Office of
Safe and Drug-Free
Schools.
The $295 million state
grant component of the
decade-old federal Safe
and Drug Free Schools
Program was eliminated
from the FY 2010 budget
by Congress and the
Obama Administration,
costing many schools
their primary funds
marked specifically for
school safety as of July
1st, 2010. The program
was a formula grant drug
and violence prevention
program which passed
money through state
education departments to
local school districts
nationwide. The
Department is instead
currently piloting a
smaller $27 million
grant targeted to state
education departments
for "bullying" and
"school climate," and is
proposing $400 million
in national competitive
grants which will serve
fewer school districts
and be skewed to
bullying and climate if
approved by Congress in
the proposed FY2011
budget.
Trump authored the cover
story article on
"Keeping Schools Safe
During Tight Budget
Times" for the upcoming
September issue of
District Administration
Magazine, a leading
education industry
publication for school
leaders. A companion
article by Kurt
Eisele-Dyrli entitled
"School Safety Gets the
Ax" highlights the
findings from the
Education Department
report. Both articles,
along with a copy of the
original federal survey
report, can be
downloaded from http://www.schoolsecurity.org/trends/school-security-budget-cuts.html and
at the
District Administration
Magazine site.
"School security and
prevention programs tend
to be the first cuts to
be put on the chopping
block by far too many
legislators and local
school boards. They're
being penny-wise and
pound-foolish," Trump
said.
Parents need to check
with their local school
districts to see what
prevention and security
programs are being cut
as safety cuts can often
be hidden from the
public eye
when discussions center
on hot issues such as
teacher layoffs,
reduction in sports
programs, and cutbacks
in school
transportation,
according to Trump. He
says there are also many
low-cost and no-cost
school safety and
preparedness measures
school leaders should
still be pursuing even
when there are cuts to
school safety funding.
Trump is a four-time invited Congressional expert witness on school safety, security and emergency preparedness issues. He has authored two books and over 60 professional articles on K-12 school security and emergency preparedness issues. Trump has appeared on all cable and network news channels, and is quoted regularly as a school safety expert in national daily newspapers and professional publications. He also blogs at www.schoolsecurityblog.com.
Expert Background and Contact Information:
Kenneth S. Trump, MPA
President
National School Safety and Security Services
Cleveland, Ohio
216-251-3067
For full biographical see
www.schoolsecurity.org/school-safety-experts/trump.html
For related articles
see:
www.schoolsecurityblog.com
Kenneth S. Trump, M.P.A., is the President of National School Safety and Security Services, a Cleveland-based national firm specializing in school security and emergency preparedness training and consulting. Ken served as a school safety officer, investigator, and youth gang unit supervisor for the Cleveland City Schools' safety division, and as a suburban Cleveland school security director and assistant gang task force director.He has authored two books and over 60 articles on school security and crisis issues. As one of the leading U.S. school safety experts, Ken has 25 years experience in the school safety profession and has worked with school and public safety officials from all 50 states. He is one of the most widely quoted school safety experts, appearing on all national news networks and cable TV and in top market newspapers. Ken is a four-time invited Congressional witness testifying on school safety and emergency preparedness issues. For more background, see www.schoolsecurity.org/school-safety-experts/trump.html. Trump also blogs at www.schoolsecurityblog.com
Kenneth S. Trump, M.P.A., is the President of National School Safety and Security Services, a Cleveland-based national firm specializing in school security and emergency preparedness training and consulting. Ken served as a school safety officer, investigator, and youth gang unit supervisor for the Cleveland City Schools' safety division, and as a suburban Cleveland school security director and assistant gang task force director.He has authored two books and over 60 articles on school security and crisis issues. As one of the leading U.S. school safety experts, Ken has 25 years experience in the school safety profession and has worked with school and public safety officials from all 50 states. He is one of the most widely quoted school safety experts, appearing on all national news networks and cable TV and in top market newspapers. Ken is a four-time invited Congressional witness testifying on school safety and emergency preparedness issues. For more background, see www.schoolsecurity.org/school-safety-experts/trump.html. Trump also blogs at www.schoolsecurityblog.com