Pennsylvania OKs $80M for crime data reporting, victim services
By Anthony Hennen | The Center Square
(The Center Square) — Police departments across Pennsylvania will get an $80 million boost for crime reporting and victim support services, along with other efforts, with a recent approval from the Commission on Crime and Delinquency.
The Shapiro administration announced the grants will include equipment upgrades and county jail-based medication-assisted treatment for drug addiction as well.
“The Commission took a significant step in advancing public safety by approving $80 million in funding to enhance our law enforcement capabilities and provide critical support to victims of crime,” PCCD Executive Director Mike Pennington said in a press release. “The funding approved today will modernize our crime reporting systems to meet national standards, bolster law enforcement equipment and technology, and fund vital services for crime victims across Pennsylvania.”
Almost $6 million will go to system upgrades for law enforcement to repeat crime statistics to the FBI’s database, NIBRS, which tracks details on crime including “victims, known offenders, relationships between victims and offenders, arrestees, and property involved in crimes.”
That upgrade could significantly improve tracking crime, as Pennsylvania struggles to “accurately capture statewide and jurisdiction-specific crime trends” because it is “well behind other states in the nation in fully utilizing NIBRS,” the press release noted.