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Ohio Attorney General's Quick Response Team Grant Program is a grant from the Ohio Attorney General's Office that funds private nonprofit organizations in Ohio providing crisis intervention, outreach, and treatment referral services. The program also funds local courts for technology projects including hardware and software purchases as required by state statute.
Project periods for court technology grants may not exceed 24 months and must begin on or after June 1, 2026. Eligible applicants for crisis services grants are private nonprofits operating crisis intervention and outreach programs in Ohio. Award amounts are not specified; check the Ohio AG website for current cycle details.
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Grant Programs - Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost Foreign Interference in Ohio Elections Complaints Law Enforcement > Bureau of Criminal Investigation > OHLEG > Grant Programs Applications sought for grants to fund court technology projects The Ohio Attorney General’s Office (AGO) is statutorily required to provide funding to courts and Common Pleas Court clerks, whether elected or appointed, for technological services, including the purchase of hardware and software.
To that end, the AGO is seeking applications from local courts in eligible counties throughout Ohio for new or improvement technology projects. Project periods may not exceed 24 months and must begin on or after June 1, 2026. The application deadline is April 19.
All applicants must also submit a completed eligibility certification form. Funding notifications are expected at the end of April. Mandatory certification form Improvements to Computerized Criminal History The office of Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost has been awarded additional federal grant money for ongoing improvements to the state’s criminal-records database, known as the Computerized Criminal History (CCH) system.
The funds will provide technological or financial assistance for three purposes: LiveScan devices, which Yost’s office distributes to qualifying entities through an application process. All courts of record are eligible to apply for LiveScan units, as is any local governmental agency coordinating efforts with a court of record to resolve issues of data accuracy and completeness.
The device allows for the capture of fingerprint images as a court interacts with defendants; the fingerprints can be transmitted to BCI, whose Identification Division manages the criminal-records database, once a case disposition is entered. Download the LiveScan grant application Electronic reporting of dispositions and adjudications by Ohio’s courts .
Many courts continue to report disposition and adjudication records to BCI by mail or through the Ohio Court’s Network. To help facilitate the transition to direct electronic reporting, all courts of record are eligible to apply for grant funds to help modernize the reporting process.
Download the Electronic reporting grant application Download the grant budget worksheet template Recovery of case dispositions not previously reported to BCI. Eligible applicants include Common Pleas Courts, Municipal Courts, County Courts and Clerks of Court.
Download Disposition recovery grant application Download the grant budget worksheet template The Ohio Law Enforcement Bulletproof Vest Program – administered by the Ohio Attorney General’s Office – continues to provide grants to local law enforcement agencies to purchase body armor vests. To date, the program has awarded grants exceeding $11. 5 million to more than 600 local law enforcement agencies in all 88 Ohio counties.
Funding for the program is provided by the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation as part of its Safety Intervention Grant Program. With a local match of 25 percent, agencies can receive up to $40,000 from the program. The interactive maps below locate the agencies that have received funding.
Links to the forms necessary to apply for the grant and receive reimbursement are below. (NOTE: Only equipment purchased after receipt of an award is eligible for reimbursement from grant funds.) This new training is available to OPOTC-certified peace officers and troopers who are assigned full- or part-time to an Ohio law enforcement tactical team.
The two-day course, “School-Response Training for Members of Ohio Law Enforcement Tactical Teams,” is taught by the Ohio Tactical Officers Association (OTOA) and has been approved by the Ohio Peace Officers Training Academy for 16 credit hours of 2023 Continued Professional Training (CPT). This flyer provides information about class dates and locations, the cost and registration.
To apply for reimbursement: Step 1: Contact OTOA to register tactical team members. Step 2: Complete the training. Step 3: Complete AGO grant request form for School-Response Training (see link below).
Step 4: Pay OTOA for training. * * The OTOA has agreed to defer payment for this course on a case-by-case basis. 2023 Grant Application Form 2024 Grant Application Form Drug Abuse Response Teams Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost has expanded a program that helps address drug addictions, overdoses and deaths within Ohio communities.
The Drug Abuse Response Team Grant Program reimburses some of the personnel and other costs for local law enforcement or government agency teams that deploy in response to overdoses and other effects of the opioid epidemic. DART awards for FY21 totaled $1. 22 million and went to 27 local agencies throughout Ohio that operate quick-response teams.
The grants, administered by the Ohio Attorney General’s Office, range from $8,700 to $62,000 per agency. Many of the response teams also received previous grants from this program, which began in 2017. This interactive map shows the locations of the law enforcement and other agencies that have received past or current grants, and the amounts awarded.
See which agencies have gotten grants in this interactive map. Applications for DART Grants and more information are available on OHLEG. Ohio School Vulnerability Assessments Attorney General Dave Yost and his team of school safety experts created the Ohio School Threat Assessment Training program to head off problems at schools before they explode into violence.
That training — 10 chapters long and entailing about three hours’ worth of material — is available via OHLEG for law enforcement officers and via the Attorney General’s website for civilians. One chapter is viewable only by certified law enforcement officers.
OPOTC-certified officers who complete the training and conduct a School Vulnerability Assessment at an elementary, middle or high school are eligible to receive a grant. Grant requests and more information are available on OHLEG. 1-866-40-OHLEG (1-866-406-4534) OHLEG Quality Assurance Unit OHLEGQualityAssurance@OhioAGO.
gov Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation 1560 State Rt. 56 SW, P. O.
Box 365 Phone: 855-BCI-OHIO (855-224-6446) Ohio Law Enforcement Gateway Special Investigations Division Technical Investigations Division OHLEG: Get More from New SWIFT RMS Factsheet OHLEG: New and Improved Factsheet Ohio Local Law Enforcement Guide to OLLEISN Certification OHLEG Rules and Regulations Ohio Law Enforcement Gateway palm card Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation Overview Booklet Task Force on Criminal Justice and Mental Illness Professional Solicitors & Fundraisers Bureau of Criminal Investigation Ohio Law Enforcement Gateway Ohio Organized Crime Investigations Commission Ohio Peace Officer Training Academy Ballot Initiative and Referendum The Mount Vernon Project: School of Public Service Ohio School Threat Assessment Training Webcheck Community Listing File a Consumer Complaint File a Charitable Complaint Online Sunshine Laws Training Victim Service Provider Training CAREER & EMPLOYEE RESOURCES
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Private nonprofit organizations operating in Ohio that provide crisis intervention, outreach, treatment referrals. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Not specified Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Federal grant success rates typically range from 10-30%, varying by agency and program. Build a strong proposal with clear objectives, measurable outcomes, and a well-justified budget to improve your chances.
Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
Yes — AI tools like Granted can help research funders, draft proposal sections, and check compliance. However, always review and customize AI-generated content to reflect your organization's unique strengths and the specific requirements of the solicitation.
Review timelines vary by funder. Federal agencies typically take 3-6 months from submission to award notification. Foundation grants may be faster, often 1-3 months. Check the program's timeline in the official solicitation for specific dates.
Many federal programs offer multi-year funding or allow competitive renewals. Check the official solicitation for continuation and renewal policies. Non-competing continuation applications are common for multi-year awards.
Ohio Attorney General's FY26 Formula Based School Safety Grant is sponsored by Ohio Attorney General's Office. This is a formula-based grant program for Ohio school districts to address local safety needs for the 2026-2027 academic year. Funds can be used for certification training for school resource officers, active-shooter response training or equipment, educational resources, training to identify and assist students with mental health issues, school supplies or equipment related to safety, systems allowing immediate camera access to responding law enforcement, silent panic alarms, gunshot-detection technology, and alert systems.
Ohio Attorney General's FY26 Program Based School Safety Grant is sponsored by Ohio Attorney General's Office. This program-based grant is available to Ohio school districts for safety-related projects during the 2026-2027 school year. It offers flexibility in addressing local safety needs, covering items such as active-shooter response training, mental health training for students, security equipment, and alert systems.
Ohio Attorney General's FY26 Formula Based School Safety Grant is sponsored by Ohio Attorney General (administered by Ohio Department of Education and Workforce). This formula-based grant provides funding for a wide range of safety initiatives for the 2026-2027 school year, including certification training for school resource officers, active-shooter response training or equipment, educational resources, training to identify and assist students with mental health issues, school supplies or equipment related to safety, systems allowing immediate camera access to responding law enforcement, silent panic alarms, gunshot-detection technology, and alert systems.