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Md. provides funds for sexual assault victims

BALTIMORE, Md. (WUSA9) — Maryland officials have awarded funds to organizations from Garrett County to Talbot County so they can help victims of sexual assault.

$287,702 worth of funds have been awarded by the Governor’s Office of Crime Control & Prevention (GOCCP), through the Sexual Assault Services Formula Grant Program (SASP), officials said. This program is the first federal funding stream solely dedicated to the provision of direct intervention and related assistance for victims of sexual assault.

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Grants provide generators for service stations

For the Cumberland Times-NewsCumberland Times-News

MCHENRY — Some service stations in Garrett and Allegany counties are in the buffer area for the “Fuel Up Maryland” grant program that assures that fuels are available both for evacuation or home energy use during an energy emergency or disaster.

During a legislative meeting last month at Garrett College, Dick Bolt, Swanton resident indicated that he went around to all the gas stations in Garrett County and that none of the people he spoke with people had put in a request for the grant program. During Superstorm Sandy, Bolt wasn’t able to get gas because there wasn’t an emergency generator and county trucks couldn’t get fuel either.

The Maryland Service Station Energy Resiliency Grant Program is a $1.7 million capital investment program administered by the Maryland Energy Administration that provides funding support to prewire for backup power generation from portable generators, fixed generators, and/or batteries for service stations located within a half-mile of a federal/state highway emergency evacuation route, according to the MEA.

MEA is awarding grants of up to $25,000 per grant to Maryland service stations. Based on a recent survey of Maryland service stations conducted by an electrical contractor, the maximum grant amount is more than 60 percent of the total cost of the planning, design, wiring and installation of backup power generation at the majority of the service stations, according to MEA.

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Garrett County secures $235,000 grant to increase use of digital technology

For the Cumberland Times-NewsCumberland Times-News

OAKLAND — Gov. Martin O’Malley announced $5.5 million in grants to local boards of education recently, including $235,000 for Garrett County for the Digital Learning Innovation Award.

The funding is designed to increase the use of digital technology in education and to help students earn college credits and career certification while in high school.

“The purpose of the grant is to support the Telepresence project to provide the ability for students, teachers and professionals throughout Garrett County Public Schools and the world to synergize without the restraints of location or walls,” said State Superintendent of Schools Lillian Lowery at a news conference outside the Statehouse in Annapolis.

O’Malley and Lowery announced six grant winners under the Early College Innovation Fund and seven under the Digital Learning Innovation Fund.

Other school districts awarded were the SEED School of Maryland and Baltimore, Carroll, Frederick, Kent and Washington counties.

The Garrett County proposal will take advantage of the county’s new fiber connectivity between the schools and to the Internet.

“The grant will also provide for student computers at elementary schools still using older computer labs,” said Chuck Trautwein, Garrett’s computer resource teacher. “This technology will enable increased collaboration and sharing of resources between Garrett County schools.”

More here.