Gov. Ron DeSantis wants to spend millions of dollars on school security measures to protect students from active shooters.
DeSantis is proposing $64 million for “school hardening” in higher education facilities as part of his $117 billion budget recommendations for Fiscal Year 2026-27.
Of that, $44 million would go to state colleges and $20 million would be slotted for universities, said Florida Education Commissioner Anastasios Kamoutsas. Kamoutsas added at last week’s press conference that the money would be spent on installing locks on classrooms.
The shooting at Florida State University this April helped spark the push for better security measures. Some students and faculty discovered as they were trying to protect themselves that classrooms could not be locked from the inside. The FSU shooting killed two people and injured others.
DeSantis is also calling to spend $6 million to expand the Guardian Program at state colleges and universities.
“This funding for school safety will ensure that students continue to have the resources needed to maintain safe and secure campuses statewide,” Kamoutsas said alongside DeSantis at the press conference last week in Orlando to unveil the Governor’s priorities.
The Guardian Program, which allows armed security guards at K-12 schools, was created after the 2018 Parkland high school shooting.
Some public school leaders have argued that they prefer to hire law enforcement officials from their local Police Department or Sheriff’s Office as school resource officers, instead of turning to security guards. The challenge, however, is that many school districts are also grappling with budget struggles.
Meanwhile, under DeSantis’ proposed budget plan, K-12 public schools would get $42 million, a $20 million increase, for school hardening and improving security.
To invest in upgraded school security technology, DeSantis budgeted more than $6 million for school districts to access a mobile panic alert system to connect with multiple agencies in case of an emergency.
DeSantis also wants to spend $450,000 on the Alyssa’s Alert Panic Button, which his budget described as “a centralization system that will be used by public emergency responders that will receive alerts from all panic alert alarm systems and integrate digital maps used by public schools, charter schools, and other educational institutions.”
DeSantis unveiled his “Floridan First” budget last week ahead of the upcoming Legislative Session, where he also called for teacher and law enforcement pay increases, more cancer research funding and accelerating road construction projects in congested areas.