Board chair behind you. Counsel in the front row. Press, parents, cameras. The questions come fast — was the protocol followed, who knew first, were the right people notified in the right order, can families be told the same thing the press is. MyFlare doesn’t promise the day never comes. It makes sure that when it does, the work is sound — and the record proves it.
In plain terms: MyFlare turns the safety plan your team already builds into an architecture that fires when triggered, lets dispatch verify before it cascades, and proves itself in a timestamped record.
Someone in your seat already runs this. Channing ISD — operational since 2024, expanding. Falmouth, Maine — a 40-second engage-and-stop drill. Built on MyFlare Alert, Sentinel, SightDesk & Command Center, with T-Mobile for Government & INTRUSION.
Three things keep a superintendent up at night when it goes wrong — not knowing what’s happening, not being able to communicate it, not being able to defend it after. The architecture answers all three.
Exact room, live audio and video, severity — not a parent in the parking lot, not the press asking a question you can’t answer.
One narrative, one source of truth. No contradicting agencies. No social-media version that gets ahead of you.
The reasonableness of every decision made under stress, legible after the fact. The record is what makes the team’s pre-commitment hold up.
“Will you know before I do?” — the question one superintendent asks another. Here, the answer is yes.
Forty-eight hours of work, walked back to where it began. This is what made the moment possible.
Your team’s planning decisions become the architecture’s configuration. The cascade runs in the order the team agreed. Roles do what they were assigned to do. The plan stops being a document and becomes the system that fires.
Real or false — that judgment is dispatch’s, made on the live picture. If real, the pre-configured People list notifies every responder and agency your team named. No human decides who else to call. The team already decided.
Every action is named, attributed, time-stamped from second zero. The board hears one narrative. The press conference cites the same record. The parent letter draws from the same source. No reconstruction.
The team’s preparation produced the expected outcome. That is what your district measures itself against.
A safety plan adopted once a year describes a reality that no longer exists by spring — staff change, roles get reassigned, numbers go stale, and nobody catches the drift until an event forces them to. MyFlare won’t let the plan go quiet.
The cadence is yours — the team sets it. The discipline is the architecture’s. It stores the schedule and certifies at every cycle. If a test slips past its date, the architecture uncertifies itself — refusing to claim a readiness it cannot prove.
Counsel asks whether it was tested. You have a date. The board asks how often. You have the cadence.
The bar your industry set — SRP, ICS, Alyssa’s Law, cascade communication, the After-Action Report. Compliance was the checkbox. We deliver what compliance was trying to achieve.
Hold / Secure / Lockdown, codified from your team’s planning decisions — proven by the audit trail.
Every role and authority named in the planning room and codified into the architecture.
Exceeded. Dispatch, SRO, principal, and you receive the live picture in the same second.
Cascade communication configured by your team, executed simultaneously — not sequentially.
After-Action Report built from the audit trail in minutes, not weeks. The record proves the work.
A panic button, a mass-notification system, a safety app — keep them. But they all do one thing: signal, then hand it to you. They leave the questions you’ll be asked at the lectern unanswered:
MyFlare is the response cycle. Dispatch verifies first — a false alarm stops there — then the plan your team built fires on its own, and the record writes itself. We don’t replace what your schools chose; we’re the architecture that makes the moment defensible.
After two years running MyFlare, Channing ISD is expanding scope — eight surfaces across Hartley County: schools, transit, courts.
“We don’t have law enforcement stationed in Channing. Our sheriff’s department is in Dalhart — it could take up to 30 minutes for them to get on site. It’s very important that they know what’s happening as it’s happening.”
Dr. Misty Heiskell · Superintendent, Channing ISD · Channing, Texas
Misty has offered a peer call to any superintendent considering MyFlare. Not a sales call — a conversation about what worked, what didn’t, and how she thinks about it now, after two years.
The trial is no charge. Implementation is one line item the CFO can model against enrollment alone — predictable forever.
The planning team convenes, the configuration gets built, the architecture runs the plan when triggered, certification runs monthly. You walk if it doesn’t deliver.
The Platform License covers every staff device; the Sentinel License activates Smart Boards, funded by the Wallet at ~70% coverage. Sworn responders never pay. First School Program: one school per county, three years free.
We send a private discussion room. Invite your principal, your sheriff, your IT lead, your counsel.
We bring SightDesk to your district. A teacher triggers from a classroom. Your team sees verified clarity in five seconds.
If the architecture executed the plan you approved — with the record to prove it — the trial continues. If not, we walk.
One thing to do next: authorize the planning work. Everything else follows from there.
It starts with the dispatch you already run and one school that says yes — then grows across your district at your pace. The next step is just a look, no commitment.
Sworn responders are always free · We respond within 24 hours
Built for the moment your district will measure itself against.