Aberdeen Mayor Douglas Ford and council members on July 9 approved acceptance of a $145,000 Department of Homeland Security grant to purchase night-vision equipment for local public-safety use, and authorized the police department to cover a potential $16,516.21 shortfall from restricted seizure and forfeiture funds.
The council action followed a recommendation from the city’s public safety committee. A staff member told the council the regional Homeland Security office administers the award and that funds are passed through the region to participating cities; staff said there were no additional access conditions attached to the award. Council members voted in favor of accepting the grant.
The safety committee discussion, presented at the meeting, noted that emergency medical calls continued to be the majority of the department’s workload; the committee also proposed the equipment purchase and the funding plan. Council members asked whether the grant carried any operational conditions or outside access requirements. A staff member answered that the grant is administered regionally and that the region passes the funds to the city; staff said there were no special conditions that would grant third-party access to city property.
Formal action recorded at the meeting allows the police department to proceed with the purchase and to use the stated restricted funds if the final purchase price exceeds the grant amount by the identified sum. The council did not specify a delivery timeline for the equipment during the meeting.
The move follows committee-level discussion of equipment needs for first responders and comes as the council considers other public-safety priorities in this fiscal year. The police department and city administration did not provide additional operational details or vendor names during the public meeting.