As one school year winds down and another approaches, school safety remains a constant priority for administrators, district leaders, families, and communities. The possibility of violence or an unexpected campus incident continues to shape how districts think about prevention, response, and long-term safety planning.
While reported school shootings have declined in the last two years, the risk has not disappeared. The need for reliable safety infrastructure, trained staff, and coordinated emergency response remains central to the K-12 operating environment.
For many districts, the challenge is not awareness. School leaders know that panic buttons, visitor management systems, emergency notification tools, access controls, and surveillance technology can strengthen campus safety. The harder question is how to fund those investments.
That is where federal school safety grants become critical.
K-12 school safety funding typically comes from a patchwork of federal, state, and local sources. Among federal programs, the School Violence Prevention Program (SVPP) remains one of the most important grant pathways for districts seeking to improve physical security and emergency response capabilities.
Administered by the Department of Justice’s Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS Office), SVPP provides competitive funding to help schools implement evidence-based safety improvements.
The program was authorized as part of the broader federal response to rising concerns about school violence, particularly following the 2018 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. While previous federal efforts focused heavily on hiring School Resource Officers, SVPP expanded the conversation toward infrastructure, technology, and law enforcement coordination.
That shift matters. School safety today depends on more than personnel. It requires systems that can support real-time communication, rapid response, access control, and situational awareness.
SVPP is designed to support school safety infrastructure and coordination between districts and law enforcement. Typical allowable uses include:
SVPP funding is focused primarily on physical security, safety technology, and emergency coordination. Certain items are restricted or prohibited, including firearms, ammunition, drones, body cameras, and biometric technology such as facial recognition.
SVPP is a competitive grant program, and awards are typically structured around multi-year implementation.
For FY26, districts should expect a structure similar to prior years:
For example, a district requesting $400,000 in federal funds would generally need to provide a local cash match of approximately $133,333 resulting in a total project cost of $533,333.
Individual schools generally cannot apply directly. Eligible primary applicants include:
Private and independent schools are not typically eligible as primary applicants, though they may benefit through partnerships with eligible public entities.
SVPP application windows are short. In FY25, the application period lasted roughly one month, closing in late June. Districts preparing for FY26 should assume a similar timeline and begin planning before the window opens.
Successful applicants typically have several elements ready in advance:
The application process generally includes two steps:
Step 1: Grants.gov
Applicants submit standard federal forms, including SF-424 and SF-LLL. Applicants also need an active SAM.gov registration and Unique Entity ID.
Step 2: JustGrants
Applicants complete the full program application, including project details, budget narrative, and supporting documentation.
Because federal registration and validation can take time, districts should treat SAM.gov readiness as an immediate priority.
Competitive applications connect safety needs to measurable outcomes. A strong proposal should show how the requested funding supports a broader safety strategy, rather than a one-time technology purchase.
Districts should clearly demonstrate:
Strong applications typically follow this logic:
Mission → Solution → Measurable Benefit → Implementation Readiness
That alignment is especially important as SVPP continues to emphasize evidence-based safety investments.
For many districts, receiving an SVPP award marks the transition from pilot efforts to long-term safety modernization. Because awards typically cover a 36-month period, districts can use SVPP funding to build a phased implementation plan rather than rely on isolated purchases.
Recent awards have supported thousands of schools nationwide, with a large share going to rural districts. That trend reinforces the program’s importance for communities that may lack the local tax base or discretionary funding needed to invest in safety infrastructure independently.
Although federal funding structures may evolve, SVPP’s core purpose of supporting safer school environments through technology, equipment, and coordination remains a national priority.
Kokomo24/7® supports districts in aligning school safety goals with available funding opportunities, including SVPP.
Our platform supports key safety functions that may align with allowable grant uses, including:
Our team can help districts identify funding opportunities, align project goals with grant requirements, and strengthen application planning.
The FY26 funding environment is shaped by complexity across federal, state, and local systems. For school safety, that complexity makes early planning essential.
SVPP remains one of the most important federal funding pathways for districts seeking to strengthen safety infrastructure and emergency response capabilities. Districts that prepare early, document need clearly, and align requests with measurable outcomes will be better positioned to compete successfully.
School safety funding will remain a central issue for K-12 leaders. Strong planning, disciplined financial oversight, and strategic partnerships continue to define long-term success.