In Chippewa County, Michigan, an elderly man with dementia went missing. Thanks to Rave Alert, the community was able to locate the missing man in 30 minutes.
In the City of Seattle, Washington, Rave Alert isn’t just used to notify the community about events or emergencies that may impact them. It’s also used to communicate internally among teams.
A tragic school shooting at Aztec High School in San Juan County, New Mexico left the entire community reeling. Rave Panic Button was soon added to their schools safety system.
For a 48-hour period throughout Superstorm Sandy, the Stony Brook Medicine hospital experienced a campus-wide network outage. Several emergency issues transpired, including a gunpoint robbery, and essential hospital staff needed to be communicated with.
For victims of domestic violence, making a verbal phone call to emergency personnel is not always possible during an incident, resulting in many disconnected calls to 9-1-1.
Students, teachers, staff and school leaders are now on campuses across Rio Rancho Public Schools. As part of their return, the Rio Rancho Public Schools Safety & Security Department is rolling out the Rave Panic Button app to all staff members.
Eaton County uses Rave Alert to send mass notifications to community members in the event of an urgent local situation. Learn how the alerts improve community safety.