If Ohio enacts Alyssa’s Law, the state would spend $25 million to purchase silent alarm systems for public and private schools, including wearable panic buttons and automatic alerts for staff.
The EPA's Clean School Bus Program awarded money to New Orleans-area transportation companies to convert over 70 diesel ...
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Built to meet growing student interest in esports, the university's new 4,000-square-foot facility includes 36 gaming PCs, ...
During a public hearing before his approval, Raheem L. Mullins predicted a future in which jurors have notebook computers and ...
The Fresno City Council has approved a 10-year lease-purchase deal to buy a brand-new H125 jet turbine helicopter – the same ...
Power line crews, fire departments, public works departments and even sheriffs' deputies with chainsaws were out in Southwest ...
A law passed this year requires the state police to create a model policy for other Maryland departments, a guideline that ...
At NASCIO, Illinois CIO Sanjay Gupta says he has won direct appropriations for tech from state officials. He wants to move ...
At this stage of the hype cycle, artificial intelligence is demonstrating real value to state IT organizations. Arizona CIO J ...
New privacy responsibilities, looming threats from GenAI and breached partners, and stubborn workforce and funding problems: ...
North and South Carolina are the first states to join the Consortium for School Networking’s Trusted Learning Environment ...