Pubdate: Sun, 18 Jul 2004 Source: Meriden Record-Journal, The (CT) Copyright: 2004, The Record-Journal Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.record-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/555 Author: Betsy Tranquilli Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/dare.htm (D.A.R.E.) POLICE BOOST COMMUNITY PROGRAMS WITH GRANT MONEY SOUTHINGTON -- The Southington police department wants the ability to do more for the community than just respond to calls and make arrests. To do that, they need to have the best vehicles with the most up-to-date equipment for traffic enforcement. They must set up sobriety checkpoints on holidays to ensure the safety of Southington motorists. They require resource officers and drug education programs in the schools. They want a victim advocate on staff to help the abused find the help they need. They want to use bikes to patrol the linear trails. But these programs cost money and money in Southington is hard to come by these days. So instead of relying on the town to come through, the department has turned to aggressively pursuing state and federal grant dollars in order to maintain the highest level of service at the lowest possible cost to the town. "We're trying to do more with less," Police Chief Jack Daly said. "We're trying to get out into the community. But it's all about funding." In the past two years alone, the department has secured more than $75,000 in grants for things like drunk-driving enforcement and bike patrols. In return, the town has only had to match less than $20,000 for those programs. "That's less than the price of a police cruiser," said Capt. Greg Simone, who serves as the department's main grant writer. The state Department of Transportation has been the biggest source of grant providers for the department, with Southington raking in more than $57,000 from the DOT to go towards equipment like a 2003 Ford Expedition and a 2003 fully equipped Ford Crown Victoria. "The DOT grants are usually very easy to do. We get almost 100 percent of the grants we ask for," Simone said. "It's allowed us to get brand new traffic enforcement vehicles, conduct DUI holiday and spot checks. It really gives us a lot of flexibility." Other state grants from the Office of Policy and Management and the Office of Emergency Medical Services have provided the department with electronic speed enforcement signs, Automatic External Defibrillators and completely covered the cost of the town's bike patrol program. "That whole program exists because of donations and grants," Daly said. "We can have this Rails to Trails program and it doesn't cost the town anything." Then there are the grants police get without even asking, like an education program with local liquor stores to combat underage drinking that was secured by the town's Youth Services department. Southington police were also approached by the Connecticut Coalition Against Domestic Violence to benefit from a grant that allows for a part-time victim's advocate to work with the department. While the majority of grants filtered down to Southington have been from the state level, the department is also working to get the federal government to pony up funds for uses such as a middle school resource officer. But federal grants, and now even state grants, are becoming elusive and many come with conditions, according to Simone. "The federal grants are very difficult to get," Simone said. "And in the case of the resource officer, if we get a grant to add more people, one of the conditions is we have to keep the person on after the grant expires. The town signed on to do that in this case, but you have to retain these people when the money is gone. Then where do you go for the money? You want to keep the programs but do you drop another junior officer? " For instance, for years the department has been utilizing grant dollars from the state to run the Drug Abuse Resistance Education Program (DARE) in elementary schools. But this year, the funding for the grants was eliminated by the state, leaving towns and cities to fend for themselves if they want to keep the successful drug prevention program running. In order to keep the program going in Southington, the department had to cut the program from 17 weeks to just 10. "They aren't giving as much as they use to," Sgt. Lowell DePalma said. "We'll get rejected for a lot of grants and it's not because we don't need the money, it's just that there are other departments that need more. Because of the economic times, there are more and more people competing for the same dollars and less of the dollars being handed out." Still, when it comes to securing grants it never hurts to ask, as far as the department is concerned. "In these economic times, how you spend dollars is very important. There is no way we can conduct all these programs without grant money," Simone said. "We've come a long way in reaching out to the public as a resource. We can do a lot more, but you have to retain the funding." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin