
For years, 911 compliance was treated as a legal requirement — something organizations addressed to avoid fines and audits. Today, that mindset is outdated.
Emergency response has become a workplace safety and duty-of-care issue.
Compliance Was the Starting Line
Regulations like Kari’s Law and RAY BAUM’s Act established important safeguards, but they were never meant to define the full scope of organizational responsibility.
They answered the question:
Can someone reach 911?
They did not answer:
- Can we locate them accurately?
- Can we notify internal responders?
- Can we coordinate response across teams?
- Can we support them after the incident?
The Rise of Duty of Care
Employees, students, patients, and regulators now expect organizations to actively protect people — not just enable a phone call.
This includes:
- Rapid internal awareness
- Coordinated response workflows
- Clear accountability
- Post-incident visibility and reporting
Safety is no longer isolated to security teams. It spans IT, HR, facilities, compliance, and leadership.
The Cost of Fragmented Safety
Many organizations rely on disconnected systems:
- Telephony handles the call
- Security hears about it later
- Facilities scramble for context
- Leadership learns after the fact
This fragmentation creates delays, confusion, and risk.
A Modern Safety Framework
Leading organizations adopt a Find-Route-Notify approach:
- Find: Accurately identify where someone is
- Route: Get the call to the right responders
- Notify: Alert internal teams instantly
This transforms 911 from a compliance requirement into a coordinated safety capability.
Workplace safety doesn’t stop at dialing 911 — that’s where it begins.
See us in action
See how RedSky supports modern duty-of-care programs.

