The federal government program that gave grants for police officers to attend college was called:

The COPS Office supports safe schools by providing grant funds, technical assistance, and resources to help deploy school resource officers (SROs). Learn more about SROs and all of our projects and resources that support school safety.

SRO Guiding Principles SRO Guiding Principles Flyer

The federal government program that gave grants for police officers to attend college was called:

The federal government program that gave grants for police officers to attend college was called:

Not in Our Town and the COPS Office present the documentary, "Beyond the Badge: Profile of a School Resource Officer"

SROs are sworn law enforcement officers responsible for safety and crime prevention in schools.

A local police department, sheriff's agency, or school system typically employs SROs who work closely with school administrators in an effort to create a safer environment.

The responsibilities of SROs are similar to regular police officers in that they have the ability to make arrests, respond to calls for service, and document incidents that occur within their jurisdiction.

Beyond law enforcement, SROs also serve as educators, emergency managers, and informal counselors. Learn more about School Resource Officers and School-based Policing here.

While an SRO's primary responsibility is law enforcement, whenever possible, SROs should strive to employ non-punitive techniques when interacting with students. Arrests should be used only as a last resort under specified circumstances.

Important Considerations When Assigning School Resource Officers:

The federal government program that gave grants for police officers to attend college was called:
The Averted School Violence (ASV) reporting system enables SROs and other law enforcement officers, school personnel and mental health professionals to share their stories and lessons learned, in order to improve school safety and help prevent future tragedies.

The federal government program that gave grants for police officers to attend college was called:

The Justice Department announced today that the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS Office) and the Office of Justice Programs (OJP) have released over $320 million in grant solicitations for programs that advance community policing, keep school students safe, and combat the production and distribution of illegal drugs.

“The Justice Department is committed to providing our state, local, Tribal, and territorial law enforcement partners with the resources they need to keep our communities safe,” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. “With these funds, the Department is supporting law enforcement agencies, as well as the residents they serve, by increasing their capacity to disrupt illegal drug trafficking, hire officers committed to using best practices to serve their communities, and keep children safe in school.”

“These grants represent our commitment to provide law enforcement agencies and the communities they serve with critical resources to make our communities safer for everyone that lives, works, and plays in them,” said Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta.

The announced solicitations include $156.5 million available for the COPS Hiring Program (CHP), a competitive award program intended to reduce crime and advance public safety through community policing by providing direct funding for the hiring of career law enforcement officers. Anticipated outcomes of the CHP program awards include increased engagement in community partnerships, implementation of projects that focus on prioritized crime issues impacting communities, implementation of changes to personnel and agency management in support of community policing, and increased capacity of agencies to implement comprehensive community policing plans that build trust and reduce crime. All local, state, Tribal, and territorial law enforcement agencies that have primary law enforcement authority are eligible to apply.

Funding also includes $53 million for the School Violence Prevention Program (SVPP). This program provides funding to improve security at schools and on school grounds in the grantees’ jurisdictions through evidence-based school safety programs. Awards will be provided directly to eligible state, local, Tribal, and territorial partners. Recipients of SVPP funding must use funding for the benefit of K-12, primary, and secondary schools and students.

The Department’s Office of Justice Programs — through its Bureau of Justice Assistance and Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention — also released almost $64.7 million in solicitations to support violence prevention and response efforts in schools through the STOP School Violence Act. More information about OJP’s grants can be found at https://www.ojp.gov/funding.       

There is also $15 million available for the COPS Anti-Methamphetamine Program (CAMP) and $35 million for the COPS Anti-Heroin Task Force (AHTF) Program. The 2022 COPS Anti-Methamphetamine Program is a competitive grant program that advances public safety by providing funds directly to state law enforcement agencies to investigate illicit activities related to the manufacture and distribution of methamphetamine. AHTF is a competitive grant program that provides funding to state law enforcement agencies in states with high per capita levels of primary treatment admissions for heroin, fentanyl, carfentanil, and other opioids. These funds will be used for drug enforcement including investigations and activities related to the distribution of heroin and other opioids or the unlawful diversion and distribution of prescription opioids.

Additional information on these programs, as well as information on how to apply, can be found at https://cops.usdoj.gov/grants.

The COPS Office is the federal component of the Department of Justice responsible for advancing community policing nationwide. The only Department of Justice agency with policing in its name, the COPS Office was established in 1994 and has been the cornerstone of the nation’s crime fighting strategy with grants, a variety of knowledge resource products, and training and technical assistance. Through the years, the COPS Office has become the go-to organization for law enforcement agencies across the country and continues to listen to the field and provide the resources that are needed to reduce crime and build trust between law enforcement and the communities served. The COPS Office has invested more than $14 billion to advance community policing, including grants awarded to more than 13,000 state, local and Tribal law enforcement agencies to fund the hiring and redeployment of more than 135,000 officers.

Police budgets represent one aspect of public spending related to law and order in the United States. The broad category of law-and-order spending would also include spending on prisons and jails, which is called “corrections expenditures,” as well as judicial spending, such as public defenders and district attorney fees, which is termed “court expenditures.”

The money for policing comes from local governments, state governments, and federal programs. However, most police spending comes from local governments. In 2017, for instance, local governments accounted for about 87% of that spending. Police spending by state governments in that year, which mostly went to funding highway patrols, represented about 1% of direct expenditures. By contrast, it represented 13% of direct expenditures at the municipal level, 9% for townships, and 8% for counties. State governments spend more on corrections than local governments, and the level of spending is about even on courts.

Figures from the U.S. Census of Governments indicate that state and local governments together expended $123 billion on police in 2019. They spent another $132 billion on courts and corrections. As such, this is one of the biggest expenses for local governments. The money goes almost entirely to operational costs. In 2019, for instance, 97% of police and courts spending at the state and local levels went to salaries and benefits, and 98% of state and local corrections spending went toward salaries and benefits.

  • Spending on law and order comes from the local, state, and federal levels and falls into multiple categories, including spending on police, corrections, and courts.
  • Between 1977 and 2019, police budgets grew from $44 billion to $123 billion, according to analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data.
  • Police spending at the local level varies enormously by place and has become more reliant on federal money in recent years.

Since the 1970s, police expenditures have accounted for a little less than 4% of state and local budgets. Although they represent a relatively consistent share of public budgets by percentage, the dollar amounts of policing budgets have grown considerably over the past few decades. Between 1977 and 2019, police budgets grew from $44 billion to $123 billion, according to an Urban Institute analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data. Corrections and courts spending also increased during this period.

The precise amount of police spending varies enormously by place. City budgeting data compiled by the Action and Race Economy Center indicates that cities tend to dedicate 25% to 40% of their budget to policing expenditures. However, police budgets can differ drastically by place, even within the same region or state. Los Angeles, for example, spent 52% of its budget on policing. In contrast, San Francisco spent only 11%.

For the year 2019, state and local spending on police was $123 billion, or about 4% of direct expenditures. The amounts were $82 billion on corrections, or about 3% of direct expenditures, and $50 billion on courts, or about 2% of direct expenditures, according to the Urban Institute.

The U.S. has complicated, overlapping police jurisdictions, largely due to the history of policing in the country. Policing evolved from the English common law system, privately paid watchmen in places such as Boston and New Amsterdam in the 17th century, and vigilantism, often with a historical preference for decentralized police. The first official police department in America, which was modeled on the London Metropolitan Police, was established in New York City in 1845 as a response to middle-class frustration over city crime rates.

Since President Herbert Hoover’s 1929 National Commission on Law Observance and Enforcement (also known as the Wickersham Commission)—the first major national survey on law and order practices in the United States, commissioned in response to soaring crime rates during Prohibition—there have been questions over whether policing precincts should be strictly tied to political jurisdictions. The commission tended to view local political control over the criminal justice system as a form of corruption. Since then, legal scholars argue, some aspects of policing have moved under the control of state governments. Much of policing remains the purview of local governments; Americans have historically tended to favor decentralized policing.

Today, policing responsibilities for any single area often overlap. Municipal police, state police, county sheriffs, and county police all may have jurisdiction. So may “other” police forces, a category that includes Native American tribal police forces and police affiliated with universities and public transit.

The U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) started publishing data on justice-related expenditures in the early 1970s, although other forms of data on law enforcement predate this. The latest available BJS data says that local police departments account for most government-allocated policing funds. The BJS also reports that there were more than 15,000 federal, state, and local police departments as of 2016. While these departments can vary in size, from 30,000 officers to one officer, most are local departments with 10 or fewer officers. The bulk of local departments have jurisdiction over areas with fewer than 10,000 residents.

Federal spending on police is also notable but can be hard to track. The federal structure for police has grown considerably in recent years, especially as anti-terror and antidrug activities have increased. U.S. Department of Justice figures report that in 2016, there were about 100,000 full-time federal law enforcement officers involved in providing police protection and about 701,000 sworn officers in state and local law enforcement agencies. Amtrak Police, National Park Service Rangers, and the Bureau of Indian Affairs had the most growth in full-time employment between 2008 and 2016. However, most federal police worked for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, or Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

As budget expenses grew, the crime rate plummeted. The rate of violent crime fell by half, and the rate of property crime fell by more than half, between 1993 and 2019, according to federal data as reported by Pew Research Center.

The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, signed during the Clinton administration, upped federal funding for federal law enforcement programs, such as the Border Patrol and Immigration and Naturalization Service, and for state and local programs through grants, congressional authorization, and similar mechanisms. It also expanded the scope of federal policing.

In the last decade, Department of Defense assistance programs have proved to be the most controversial of the federal police spending programs in the United States. In 2014, the fatal shooting of unarmed Black teenager Michael Brown caused riots in Ferguson, Missouri. In the aftermath of the riots, attention focused on federal programs 1033 and 1122, which exist to aid police departments in acquiring military gear as diverse as office equipment and vehicles.

As the drug war escalated, these programs moved equipment from the military to law enforcement, which was supposed to help execute the wars on terror and drugs. The Defense Logistics Agency (DLA), which manages 1033, says that it has transferred $7.6 billion in assets to 8,200 federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies across 49 states and four U.S. territories so far. Program 1122, under the National Defense Authorization Act, makes funds available to law enforcement to get military equipment at a discounted rate for antidrug policing. White House estimates indicate that the federal government has given out $18 billion to assist police in purchasing military gear through Program 1122.

Other federal departments—including the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Homeland Security, and the Department of Defense—offer grants and other money to local departments for purposes that range from anti-terror and antidrug activity to infrastructure improvements. The Department of Justice’s 2021 budget was $31.7 billion. Of that, 50% went to law enforcement, and 28.7% went to prisons and detention.

The main federal programs meant to assist local police departments are the Community Organized Policing Services program (COPS) and the Justice Assistance Grant program, both run through the Department of Justice.

  • The COPS program established by the 1994 crime bill says it has provided more than $14 billion for police recruitment and training in localities across the country since it was created. In 2020, this program provided $400 million to hundreds of police departments across the country to make 2,732 hires.
  • The Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant program describes itself as the “leading source of federal justice funding to state and local jurisdictions,” and it offers money to cover operational costs and equipment purchases. It allocated $186,979,951 to states in 2021, according to the latest data that the program publicly provides. The program also allocates money to municipal and county governments.

Police spending is expanding and is becoming more reliant on federal funds. Protests over police killings of Black Americans have centered on police funding in the U.S., including some calls to “defund” or “abolish” the police and reinvest the money in other programs. These proposals have met with opposition, particularly at the federal level, with critics such as President Joe Biden offering a dismissal of the notion in a Feb. 16, 2021, CNN Town Hall.

Biden’s 2021 criminal justice plan included provisions to invest $300 million to “reinvigorate” community-organized policing, a plan that entails hiring more officers. Opinion polling from 2020 suggested more popular support in America for measures such as training police, creating civilian oversight boards, and maintaining databases for tracking officers accused of misconduct than for disinvestment, as interpreted by Pew Research Center.