Fairfield Will Use COVID Money to Improve School Safety

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(TNS) – Officials are looking to use federal COVID money given to Fairfield to improve school safety.

The selectmen unanimously approved school officials’ request to use more than $355,000 awarded to Fairfield for its COVID response by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

How the money will be spent has not been determined yet. Superintendent Michael Testani told the selectmen that school security consultants he has worked with in the past are reviewing the district for free and will come back with recommendations on what the district can do and possible costs associated with it.


He said the contractors are vetted and on the state contract lists.

Selectman Thomas Flynn said it was also important to work with the police department, which Testani said the district would continue to do.

“Over the past 10 years or so, we’ve done a significant security upgrade at the schools that’s been done in concert with the police department,” he said.

School officials applied for the federal money during the 2021 school year to be reimbursed for the personal protective equipment and other COVID preventative measures it purchased, such as desk shields, school board chair Jennifer Jacobsen told the selectmen at the recent meeting.

Now that the money has been awarded, the district is looking to use the money instead for school security upgrades. She said it would still apply to the same category the money was awarded under since it’s for building maintenance.

Fairfield has long debated school security, including at a town hall back in 2018 where speakers shared concerns about vulnerabilities at the schools. That discussion echoed a similar one on the national stage following the school shooting in Parkland, Fla.

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©2023 The News-Times (Danbury, Conn.)
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


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