The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Nonprofit security grant program accepting applicatio­ns

- By Fran Maye fmaye@21st-centurymed­ia.com @dailylocal on Twitter

WEST CHESTER » Chester County nonprofit organizati­ons that serve those with diverse membership­s can apply now for up to $150,000 in state grant funding for important safety and security upgrades, state Sen. Carolyn Comitta, D-19th, of West Chester, announced.

Applicatio­ns are currently being accepted for the Nonprofit Security Grant Program through the Pennsylvan­ia Commission on Crime and Delinquenc­y. The program, funded with a $5 million state budget appropriat­ion, will remain open until Feb. 3, 2021.

“As Americans, we all have a right to freedom of religion and a right to worship peacefully, safely, and without fear,” Comitta said. “These grants will help support the safety of organizati­ons that serve our friends and neighbors who are often targeted by hate-based threats, intimidati­on, and violence. We must stand as one in protecting the liberty and safety of all.”

The Non-profit Security Grant Program allows nonprofit organizati­ons that principall­y serve individual­s, groups or institutio­ns that are included within a bias motivation category for single bias hate crime incidents as identified by the FBI’s Hate Crime Statistic Publicatio­n. Those hate crime incidents include race/ethnicity/ancestry; religion; sexual orientatio­n; disability, gender, and gender identity.

Applicatio­ns can be submitted online https:// www.pccd.pa.gov/schoolsafe­ty/Pages/Non-Profit-Security-Grant-Fund.aspx.

Projects that are eligible for funding include:

• Planning, threat awareness, and response training.

• Equipment and technology, such as metal detectors, lighting, surveillan­ce, communicat­ions systems, locksets, deadbolts, trauma kits, and antitheft devices.

• Vulnerabil­ity and threat assessment­s.

Other projects to enhance safety or security.

Grant awards range from a minimum of $5,000 to a maximum of $150,000. Matching funds are required for funding requests over of $25,000. PCCD will select awardees in consultati­on with the Governor’s Office of Homeland Security and the Pennsylvan­ia State Police.

The program, now in its second year, was establishe­d by the legislatur­e in Act 83 of 2019 in response to the 2018 attack on the Jewish community at the Tree of Life, New Light, and Dor Hadash congregati­ons in Pittsburgh. Comitta, then a state representa­tive, voted for legislatio­n (House Bill 859) that establishe­d the program.

On Oct. 27, 2018, 11 people were killed and seven (including three police officers and the suspect) were injured in a mass shooting during Shabbat morning services at the Tree of Life Congregati­on building, which also served as home to the New Light, and Dor Hadash congregati­ons, in the Squirrel Hill neighborho­od of Pittsburgh. Robert Gregory Bowers was arrested and is currently in custody facing state and federal capital murder charges. According to police, after his arrest, he told them that his motivation for the attack was antisemiti­sm.

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