Harrisonburg Panic Button App

LockNow Safety serves schools near Harrisonburg by providing panic button technology to School Administrators and Safety Coordinators. LockNow Safety equips schools with the active threat alerts and training needed to develop and implement effective safety mitigation practices. This enables school safety teams to ensure an immediate response to active shooter attacks. The safest response to an intruder is the fastest response, and immediate alerts from LockNow Safety bring this to your campus.

LockNow Safety enables and supports an immediate active shooter response to schools of all sizes across the Harrisonburg area.

Our panic button technology allows any staff member to send an emergency alert to the entire campus the instant a threat is observed.

Developed with extensive experience, resources, and collaboration across the safety, security, and education sectors, the LockNow Safety App helps prevent delays in communication such as those in Parkland, Florida and Uvalde, Texas.

The first step to a swift response in an active shooter incident is immediate awareness for everyone.

View more details about the Locknow App by watching our video: Watch the LockNow App “How It Works” Video.

Customizable

The Locknow Safety App is tailored to meet the unique needs of your campus. You decide who can send alerts, initiate drills, and manage permissions. We recommend giving all staff access to the panic button for active threat situations. During emergencies, the app simplifies communication, allowing users to receive updates, report issues, and share vital information. You can also assign specific users to receive text alerts only. Whether your school has one campus or several, Locknow gives you full control over user settings.

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Authorities

The LockNow Safety App enables cooperating authorities and first responders to receive notification alerts or text messages during an active shooter event.
These essential members of the active threat response team can be registered to receive real active shooter alerts only, avoiding interruptions from practice drills.
Registered authorities receive alerts simultaneously with school personnel when a panic button is activated, helping improve response times for emergency responders.

What Are People Saying

Richard Asbill, Superintendent of the Bolivar School District, stated:
“We implemented the LockNow App in our district and are pleased with the results.
The app allows all administrators and employees to initiate, receive notifications, and stay informed during an emergency.”

With excellent service from the LockNow staff, schools always receive the support they need.
When any technology issues arise, the LockNow team steps in and removes the burden from administrators so they can focus on their jobs.
With the founder being a former principal, we understand the demands of school leadership and ensure our system adds no additional stress.
We serve each person individually because safety is our highest priority.

View LockNow Safety App pricing

Our Founder

With more than 29 years of service in education and school safety, Randy has dedicated his career to protecting learning environments.
Whether it”s planning ahead, reacting in real time, or reviewing what”s already in place, Randy has been directly involved in every step of the security journey.
As a certified instructor and seasoned administrator, he teaches vital safety practices and crisis response techniques to schools, churches, and local businesses.

Our Passion

Creating a safe and confident environment is more important than ever.
If your school is considering panic button technology to improve active threat response, our team is ready to help.

For expert safety solutions tailored to schools, churches, and businesses,

email us at team@locknowapp.com
. Begin your journey with a no-obligation FREE TRIAL.



Start Your Free Trial Now

– no risk, no credit card required.



Why Every School Needs a Panic Button System

What We Do:

Active Shooter Response | Anti-Bullying Guide | Behavioral Health Guide | Crisis Management Plan | Emergency Drills Guide | Legal Compliance Guide | Parent Community Involvement | Safety Compliance Checklist | School Safety Equipment

About Harrisonburg

Harrisonburg is an independent city in the shenandoah valley region of the commonwealth of virginia in the united states. It is also the county seat of the surrounding rockingham county, although the two are separate jurisdictions. As of the 2010 census, the population was 48,914, with a census-estimated 2016 population of 53,078. The bureau of economic analysis combines the city of harrisonburg with rockingham county for statistical purposes into the harrisonburg, virginia metropolitan statistical area, which has a 2011 estimated population of 126,562. Harrisonburg is home to james madison university, a private, mennonite-affiliated liberal arts university. Although the city has no historical association with president james madison, jmu was nonetheless named in his honor as madison college in 1938 and renamed as james madison university in 1977. Emu largely owes it existence to the sizable mennonite population in the shenandoah valley, to which many pennsylvania dutch settlers arrived beginning in the mid-18th century in search of rich, unsettled farmland. The city has become a bastion of ethnic and linguistic diversity in recent years. Over 1,900 refugees have been settled in harrisonburg since 2002. As of 2014, hispanics or latinos of any race comprise 19% of the city’s population. Harrisonburg city public schools learners. Language learning software company rosetta stone was founded in harrisonburg in 1992, and the multilingual yard sign originated in harrisonburg in 2016. According to the united states census bureau, the city has a total area of 17.4 square miles, of which 17.3 square miles is land and 0.1 square miles is water. As of the census of 2010, 48,914 people, 15,988 households, and 7,515 families resided in the city. The population density was 2,811.1/mi2. The racial makeup of the city was 78.4% white, 6.4% black or african american, 0.3% native american, 3.5% asian, 0.1% pacific islander, 8.2% from other races, and 3.1% from two or more races. Hispanics or latinos of any race were 15.7% of the population, up from 8.85% according to the census of 2000

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