Southern New Hampshire University
OL-330 H-1990 Grant Writing
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, 3-3 Final Project: Milestone Two
Expected results of this project specific to the goals and objectives
The expected result of this project is to be able to increase the fleet of vehicles available
to officers at the local Indiana parole office to fulfill their daily duties as a sworn peace officer,
while keeping the citizens of the state of Indiana safe and be less dependent on other agencies to
help. Also, the goal is to have a backup vehicle if multiple official runs need to occur or if the
current vehicle has issues, then the secondary or even third vehicle could be utilized.
The goals and objectives of this grant is to have the vehicles fully paid without increasing
an undue cost to taxpayers, have budget and resources taken away from the yearly state of
Indiana resources, and potentially embrace leading technology such as electric vehicles while
cutting down on carbon emissions. Beyond the purchase of the vehicle building a fleet the goal is
to have the funds available for maintenance, insurance, gas, and other expenses associated with
the usage of fleet vehicles.
Type of data is necessary to determine whether you are meeting the project goals and
objectives
The type of data necessary to determine whether I am meeting the projected goals and
objectives with respect to whether my participants or community improve over time starts with
forming SMART goals. Allan F. Mogensen coined the phrase, “Work smarter, not harder.” We
all want to work smarter and not just harder. SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable,
Realistic, and Timely) and meet all the company objectives for fleet expansion. Specific means
to be well defined and clear to the point. Measurable is a specific criterion that measures
progress to accomplish goal completion. Achievable means the goal is attainable and not
impossible. Realistic can be a hanging spot at times. The goal must be in reach and relevant to
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