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哥伦布、匹兹堡及各地消息
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Governor DeWine Increases Wellness Support for
Ohio's First Responders by $20 Million
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(COLUMBUS, Ohio)—Ohio Governor Mike DeWine announced today that an
additional $20 million will be dedicated to supporting the
recruitment and wellness needs of Ohio's first responders.
` Today's announcement brings the total amount of funding for the
Ohio First Responder Recruitment, Retention, and Resilience Program
to $95 million. Governor DeWine created the program in May 2022 to
support the wellness needs of law enforcement officers, dispatchers,
firefighters, paramedics, and emergency medical technicians (EMTs).
"When it comes to public safety, we don't want our police officers,
firefighters, and medics to be overworked and exhausted when they're
responding to emergencies," said Governor DeWine. "Through this
program, we're not only helping local first responders get support
for their mental wellbeing, but we're also helping to ease the
workload on current staff by funding new hires."
Out of the $95 million, a total of $61 million has been awarded to
237 first responder agencies to date. This total includes $11.9
million for 29 agencies announced today as part of the grant
program's sixth round. Grant awards for the remaining $34 million
will be announced in the coming months.
Wellness Grants R6
SUMMARIES: Wellness Grant Awards Round 6
The Ohio First Responder Recruitment, Retention, and Resilience
Program awards funding for initiatives that support wellness
programs addressing mental, physical, and emotional health issues
unique to first responders; recruitment and retention efforts to
restore workforce levels; onboarding and training costs; and
explorer programs to engage young adults about first responder
careers. The $95 million in funding to be awarded as part of the
program includes approximately $1.3 million that was awarded to
several statewide service providers in June.
MORE: Wellness Grant Awards by County (Rounds 1-6)
The Ohio First Responder Recruitment, Retention, and Resilience
Program is administered by the Ohio Emergency Management Agency and
funded as part of the $250 million in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA)
funds that Ohio dedicated to first responders to help counter
various pressing issues exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. The
additional $20 million committed to the program today was initially
part of the Ohio Violent Crime Reduction Grant Program, also funded
through ARPA, which has now awarded funding to every law enforcement
agency that requested a grant for a qualifying violent crime
reduction initiative.
Governor DeWine has also placed enhanced focus on the wellness of
first responders through the creation of the Ohio Office of First
Responder Wellness within the Ohio Department of Public Safety. The
new statewide office focuses exclusively on the well-being of first
responders and provides specialized support and training to help
emergency-response agencies proactively address post-traumatic
stress and other traumas caused by factors that are unique to
first-responder careers.
Other assistance for first responders developed by Governor DeWine
since taking office in 2019 includes the creation of the Ohio
Narcotics Intelligence Center, Ohio School Safety Center, Ohio
Office of Law Enforcement Recruitment, Ohio Prisoner Extradition
Reimbursement Program, Ohio Body-Worn Camera Grant Program, Ohio
Ballistics Testing Initiative, Ohio Crime Lab Efficiency Program,
Ohio Violent Crime Reduction Grant Program, Ohio Court Backlog
Reduction Program, and the new eWarrant database. |
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