AUSTIN – Commissioner of Education Mike Morath announced today that the Texas Education Agency (TEA) has been awarded two Students, Teachers, and Officers Preventing (STOP) School Violence Act grants. Both federal grants, worth $1 million each, will be used to support mental health training for Texas school districts, as well as establish effective campus threat assessment practices across the state.
“Texas remains committed to providing a safe learning environment for every student on every public school campus across our state,” said Commissioner Morath. “By focusing on these two key areas of mental health and preventative measures, we strengthen our state’s ongoing commitment to school safety.”
The two STOP School Violence Act grants awarded the state will be used for the following:
Commissioner Morath noted that the two grants of $1 million each represent the maximum grant awards for each category of the STOP School Violence grants.
Both issues were discussed and identified during Gov. Greg Abbott’s roundtable discussions on school safety held earlier this year.
The need to implement statewide training in the threat assessment process is among the recommendations in the Governor’s School and Firearm Safety Action Plan, which was released in May.
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