Award Information
Description of original award (Fiscal Year 2021, $150,000)
The Baker County Sheriff’s Office (BCSO) is requesting 150,000 dollars in US Department of Justice funds to establish and operate a holistic, locally based, proactive program to locate or prevent the wandering of individuals with forms of dementia such as Alzheimer’s disease or developmental disabilities such as autism, who due to their condition, wander from safe environments. The proposed Bringing the Lost Home Project will assist local emergency personnel in improving the search performance for locating missing residents, especially these populations that have a high propensity to wander. (BCSO) plans to purchase the Bringing the Lost Home program from a subrecipient, Scent Evidence K9. The Bringing the Lost Home Project utilizes non-restrictive interventions in preparing individuals and families, and in responding to individuals who have wandered from safe environments. The program has been successfully implemented in several states.
The lead agency of the Bringing the Lost Home Project will be the (BCSO). Because the (BCSO) will partner with the Rotary Club of Baker County, the Baker County Fire Department, the City of MacClenny Fire Department, and Meridian Behavioral Healthcare to respond effectively to individuals served by these government agencies and nonprofits with special needs, to raise awareness of the wandering risks of these populations, and to ensure that Individual Preparedness Plans are in place. In addition, emergency management agencies and law enforcement officials in the surrounding counties will have access to Baker County’s missing persons response services through memorandums of understanding.
The proposed Bringing the Lost Home Project will consist of the Scent Evidence K9 Bringing the Lost Home public awareness campaign, the Scent Evidence K9 Missing Persons Response Protocol, a trained scent-discriminate canine, the Scent Evidence K9 M77 K9 handler training, distributing Scent Evidence K9 Human Scent Preservation Kits which include Individual Preparedness Plans, and the SEKR human scent collection device and materials. The goals of the project are to 1) Enhance public awareness in Baker County of wandering behavior of individuals with dementia or developmental disabilities to decrease incidents of wandering and encourage community involvement in prevention and finding missing persons, and 2) Provide emergency protocols, response training and responder scent collection materials for Baker County first responder agencies that facilitate the safe rescue of individuals with dementia or developmental disabilities who wander away from safe environments.