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April 29, 2021 in News Photo: Clarksville Now
CLARKSVILLE, TN (CLARKSVILLE NOW) – The Tennessee General Assembly approved funding Thursday for the construction of an 114,6000-square-foot Health Professions Building on Eighth Street as well as the creation of the state’s first ever Institute for National Security and Military Studies.
The General Assembly approved the ambitious projects as part of the state’s 2021-2022 annual budget.
“I’m so pleased the Tennessee General Assembly is generously supporting the important work we do at Austin Peay by providing funding for these transformative projects,” APSU President Michael Licari said. “We especially appreciate the leadership of Deputy Speaker Curtis Johnson and Senator Bill Powers and the strong support of Representatives Jason Hodges and Jay Reedy.”
Clarksville Now
CLARKSVILLE, TN (CLARKSVILLE NOW) – The Tennessee General Assembly approved funding Thursday for the construction of an 114,6000-square-foot Health Professions Building on Eighth Street as well as the creation of the state’s first ever Institute for National Security and Military Studies.
The General Assembly approved the ambitious projects as part of the state’s 2021-2022 annual budget.
“I’m so pleased the Tennessee General Assembly is generously supporting the important work we do at Austin Peay by providing funding for these transformative projects,” APSU President Michael Licari said. “We especially appreciate the leadership of Deputy Speaker Curtis Johnson and Senator Bill Powers and the strong support of Representatives Jason Hodges and Jay Reedy.”
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Clarksville Now
CLARKSVILLE, TN – In February, a few days before the Super Bowl, residents in the small Florida town of Oldsmar came dangerously close to having high levels of lye in their drinking water. Hackers had breached computers in the town’s water plant. Luckily, the intrusion was caught before the lye reached local faucets, but the attack highlighted the potential threats now facing local communities across the country.
In the coming years, law enforcement agencies – police departments and sheriff’s offices – will need to hire more people with backgrounds in homeland security, and Austin Peay State University wants to be one of the state’s main locations for this type of training. That’s because the University’s Department of Criminal Justice plans to offer a new Master of Science in Criminal Justice degree next fall, with an optional concentration in Homeland Security.