Orem Panic Button App

LockNow Safety provides schools near Orem with real-time active threat alerts and expert-led training to build effective school safety protocols. By streamlining emergency response planning, we enable school safety teams to act swiftly during active shooter incidents. Immediate alerts mean faster decisions — and LockNow Safety delivers that speed when it matters most. Our mobile-friendly application provides panic buttons to staff throughout your campus.

In Orem, LockNow Safety provides schools with the ability to act without delay when a threat arises.

Our panic button feature allows any staff member to instantly notify the entire campus of an intruder, ensuring no time is lost. Developed through years of experience and cross-sector collaboration, the LockNow Safety App addresses the communication gaps that have proven deadly in past school emergencies. The key to a swift response is making sure everyone knows — immediately.

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

Randy brings over 29 years of experience as a school administrator and school protection officer.
He specializes in facility safety practices and crisis communication, and is a certified instructor.
Randy offers safety training and expert guidance for churches, schools, and businesses.
With hands-on experience in every phase of the security process—from proactive planning to threat response and safety assessments—Randy delivers practical, real-world solutions.

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 Orem

Orem is a city in utah county, utah, united states, in the northern part of the state. It is adjacent to provo, lindon, and vineyard and is about 45 miles south of salt lake city. Orem is one of the principal cities of the provo-orem, utah metropolitan statistical area, which includes all of utah and juab counties. The population was 84,324 at the 2000 census, while the 2010 population was 88,328 making it the fifth-largest city in utah. Utah valley university is located in orem. The orem owlz of the minor league baseball pioneer league play their home games at the college. Orem uses the slogan in 2010 forbes rated it the 5th best place to raise a family. Also, time magazine rated the provo-orem area as the best place to live for spiritual well-being, due to a high population of members of the church of jesus christ of latter-day saints. At one time the area was known as sharon, a biblical name for a mostly level strip of land running between mountains and the sea, and the name of the vermont birth town of joseph smith, founder of the latter day saint movement. Another former name was provo bench. In an apparent attempt to attract more investment to the town and provide an easy way for the large population of farmers with orchards to ship produce, in 1914 it was named after walter c. Orem, president of the salt lake and utah railroad in the early 1900s. Orem was incorporated on may 5, 1919. Orem is located at 401756n1114147w. Its average elevation is 4756 feet. As of 2011 the 88,112 residents of orem had a racial and ethnic composition of 89.3% white, 0.9% black or african american, 0.9% native american, 1.6% asian, 0.5% pacific islanders, 4% non-hispanics reporting some other race, 2.9% two or more races reported and 14.8% hispanic, as orem has a large mexican american community with other latinos residing in the city. This contrasts with the census of 2000, which showed a racial makeup of 90.80% white, 0.33% african american, 0.73% native american, 1.45% asian, 0.86% pacific islander, 3.64% from other races, and 2.18% from two or more races. Hispanic or latino of any race were 8.56% of the population. The 2000 census counted 84,324 people, 23,382 households, and 19,079 families. The population density at that time was 4,572.6 people per square mile. There were 23,382 households out of which 48.8% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 69.0% were married couples living together, 9.5% had a female householder with no husband present, and 18.4% were non-families. 12.4% of all households were made up of individuals and 5.1% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 3.57 and the average family size was 3.93

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