Youngstown News, Stimulus money to be used to bring back laid-off cops
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Stimulus money to be used to bring back laid-off cops


Published: Wed, April 1, 2009 @ 12:00 a.m.

By Ed Runyan

WARREN — The Warren Police Department will attempt to use federal stimulus money to help in an effort to bring 10 police officers back from layoff and retain 20 others.

The city will get $221,231 of a U.S. Bureau of Justice Assistance Grant. The department also will get an undetermined amount of federal money from another stimulus grant called the Community Oriented Policing Services Hiring Recovery Program (known as CHRP), said Capt. Tim Bowers of the Warren Police Department.

The city will seek enough money from the CHRP program to try to bring back 10 of the 20 police officers who were laid off Jan. 1 and retain an additional 20 officers whose jobs are at risk because of the city’s continuing revenue declines, Bowers said.

The program will pay part of the wages of employees on layoff or in danger of layoff for three years, Bowers said.

In the fourth year, the city must come up with the money to pay their wages.

The city plan would be to bank the $221,231 it will receive this year from the JAG grant, along with similar amounts in 2010 and 2011, to help pay the salaries in the fourth year (2012), Bowers said.

The Trumbull County Sheriff’s Department will use its $108,045 JAG share to buy new cruisers.

Warren and the sheriff’s department received the bulk of the $423,987 the federal government allotted in stimulus money for Trumbull County law enforcement agencies.

The police departments in Niles ($41,620), Girard ($20,295), Liberty ($10,589), Howland ($8,236) and Warren Township ($13,971) shared the other $94,711.

The amount of money provided to each department was determined by crime statistics generated by the various departments.

Specifically, the grant amounts were based on the number of the most serious types of crimes, including murder, rape, robbery, burglary and assault.

Today, the Trumbull County commissioners are expected to approve an agreement between the sheriff’s department and the six other departments that governs the use of the money.

Ernie Cook, chief deputy for the sheriff’s department, said the addition of stimulus money to the county’s JAG grant allocation significantly increased the county’s funding in that category this year.

The department received only $4,650 in 2008.

Though county police departments know how much JAG grant money they will get, they have to formally apply for the funds by mid-April, officials say.

The departments also have until April 14 to apply for the CHRP money. The county hopes to use money from that grant to hire five more deputies to patrol the townships that don’t have their own police department, Cook said.

The department has 15 deputies providing law enforcement to about 50,000 county residents, Cook said.

Eleven townships already have approved resolutions supporting the idea of forming a group police force with the sheriff’s department, Cook said. They are the nine of the 10 townships in the two rows of northern townships (excluding Kinsman), plus Southington and Newton townships.

runyan@vindy.com


Comments

1Ralphie(31 comments)posted 2 years, 10 months ago

Apparently the City of Youngstown can't utilize stimulus money to retain Police. In 2002 the City of Youngstown had a $2.5 million dollar deficit. (see Tribune Article below from 07-02) At that time 60 City employees were laid off. 11 were Police Officers. This Mayor is laying off 34 City employees and 26 are gonna be Police Officers. Explain the logic in this. Does this Mayor have a personal issue with the Police, or was Mckelvey just a much more logical mayor?

Deficit Forcing Youngstown To Lay Off 60 Workers
Story from William H. Owen from the Warren Tribune Chronicle on 07/25/2002.

YOUNGSTOWN - Facing a $2.5 million deficit in 2002, the city announced the layoff of 60 city workers.
The layoffs include 21 workers in the Police Department, including 11 police officers, 15 firefighters and 24 other general fund workers who could be without work for a year or more.

Mayor George M. McKelvey said the layoff notices will go out Friday and Monday, effective in seven days for some and 14 days for others, depending on union contracts. All will be in effect by mid-August.

McKelvey said that despite the layoffs and the early retirement buyouts taken by 41 city workers, the city will still end 2002 in deficit, and that is if ''nothing else goes wrong.''

He said the deficit is now sitting at $2 to $2.5 million of the city's $48.9 million budget - about 5 percent. He said the deficit is the result of the Phar-Mor closing, the closing of the private prison, the loss of the police COPS grant, no income tax growth and an anticipated $900,000 drop in the inheritance tax.

Besides the safety forces, the layoffs include workers in the finance, public works, parks and Health Departments and a city council clerk.

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