In an emergency, the deadliest gap is the first sixty seconds — the silence between when something happens and when help knows. MyFlare closes it: one trigger sends the exact location and a live picture to the people who can act, the instant it's needed. For schools, first responders, and the communities they protect.
Already in the field. Running in 911 centers, sheriff's offices, and school districts — built on MyFlare Alert, Sentinel, SightDesk & Command Center, with T-Mobile for Government & INTRUSION.
The same network protects a classroom, a county, and a family — but each of you needs a different conversation. Start where you stand.
A response that runs itself when seconds count — at a cost that doesn't need a bond, with proof you did everything reasonable.
You authorize the network, author the plan, and take command. It fires two ways and runs itself — and the seats are free.
Churches, clinics, campuses, events — soft targets that deserve the same first-minute certainty as a school. One button to the officers who protect you.
The MyFlare Alert app: one button, your trusted contacts, your exact location — discreet help when you can't make a call.
A conventional 911 call burns its first two minutes on dialing, waiting, and explaining. MyFlare hands responders the truth before that call would have connected.
A real department, a real drill. Falmouth PD ran an active-shooter exercise on MyFlare and shaved over two minutes off a conventional response.
Chief KilbridePolice Chief
Sheriff FowlerSheriff
Sheriff StevensonSheriff
Sheriff KirkpatrickSheriff
Judge GordonJudgeA panic button just sounds the alarm and leaves everyone to improvise. MyFlare runs the response you already drilled — so each person acts on their training, not their adrenaline. The clock at the top of this page isn't an animation; it's the system: one trigger, and four parts move together.
The app in a pocket or on a wall — one press sends location and a live picture, no call required.
Fixed hardware that pins the exact room, indoors, without depending on GPS.
The dispatch & command console — see, hear, validate, and direct, live.
Major-incident orchestration when an event grows beyond a single site.
Reaching help used to mean getting to the infrastructure — the wired phone on the wall, the call box on the corner, the panic button bolted in one spot. Then the network moved into the air, and the phone became whatever you already carried. Gen 1 safety is the call box: hardwired to a fixed system, useful only if the right person reaches the right device. Gen 2 is the cell phone — the alert rides on the smart board, the phone, the laptop already in the room, and follows the role and the rule, not the wire. No one installs new payphones anymore; no one should be wiring in new panic infrastructure either.
It rides on the phones, boards, cameras, and dispatch terminals you already own. Activation is a half-day — not a construction project.
Because it rides on what you have, it's a software cost — no per-building rebuild, no sensors to depreciate and replace every few years.
New capabilities, new sites, and new agencies add to the same network. What you adopt today grows instead of going obsolete.
Distributed, not centralized. That's the whole difference — and it's why it's faster, cheaper, and impossible to knock out in one shot. See how Gen 2 works →
PortNexus spent years building safety technology for the road. Parkland, in 2018, changed the mission: we turned that engineering toward the deadliest gap in any emergency — the silent first minute — and built MyFlare to close it. It's not a product to us. It's the reason the company exists.
A PortNexus Safety Network — one platform protecting schools, first responders, and the communities they serve. Law enforcement seats are always free.
Tell us who you're protecting and we'll show you the version built for you — a school, a county, a place where people gather, or your own family. A look, not a commitment.
No cost to evaluate · Law enforcement seats are always free · We respond within 24 hours
Built for the ones who run toward it — and the ones they protect.