Purdue Extension announces staff shifts; CASA warns of potential VOCA grant cut

Delaware County Council · December 17, 2025

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Purdue Extension announced leadership and educator changes effective Jan. 1 and 4‑H enrollment data; court administrator reported a possible 40% state-level reduction to VOCA funding that could force CASA to seek county funds if it loses staff.

Purdue Extension officials and court administration updated council on staffing and program issues at the Dec. 16 meeting.

Justin Curley, county extension director, said he will transfer to Wayne County effective Jan. 1. He introduced Emily Kring as the incoming county ag educator and noted Amanda Bullion will take over as county extension director. Vicky Gassaway, the 4‑H educator, told council the program serves more than 300 4‑H youth and over 100 adult volunteers and emphasized that 4‑H activities now include STEM and non-livestock projects.

Court administrator Emily Anderson told the council that the federal VOCA grant—administered at the state level for CASA entities—may be cut by 40% when the state allocates funds. "That does not mean that our CASA grant will be cut by 40%, but it's 40% for all the CASA entities within the state," Anderson said. She said the worst-case scenario for her program is losing a full-time staffer, and that if that happens they will likely request County General funding to maintain operations; the final impact will not be known until July.

Council thanked department staff and heard no public comments. The session closed with holiday remarks and an adjournment.