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Law EnactedAlyssa's Law in Georgia: Law Enacted
Georgia enacted HB 268 ("Ricky and Alyssa's Law") in 2025, requiring panic buttons, accurate facility maps, and anonymous reporting systems in K-12 schools. Compliance deadline: July 1, 2026. The state allocated $108.9 million in grants averaging $41,000 per school to support implementation.
Request a DemoWhat Georgia Districts Need to Know
Alyssa's Law is active in Georgia. K-12 school districts are required to implement silent panic alarm systems that notify local law enforcement directly — without alerting a potential attacker or routing through a third-party monitoring center.
Districts that have not yet deployed a compliant system should act now. Non-compliance risks loss of state education funding, disqualification from school safety grants, and increased liability exposure in the event of an emergency. Review your state's specific compliance deadline in your district's legal counsel guidance or state department of education communications.
Federal funding through the STOP School Violence Act (SVPP) and Title IV-A specifically covers panic alert technology. Many Georgia districts have funded full deployments through these programs with no out-of-pocket cost to the district.
Georgia Compliance Requirements
Silent panic alarms accessible to all staff — no verbal communication required to trigger
Alerts route directly to local law enforcement dispatch (PSAP) — no third-party monitoring center
Precise location data transmitted with every alert so responders know where to go
Compliance documentation and drill records maintained for state reporting
How Positive Proof Satisfies Alyssa's Law Requirements
Positive Proof's panic button solution is designed to meet Alyssa's Law requirements in all enacted states — with implementation support and compliance documentation included.
Wearable Hardware Activation
Every staff member wears a panic device — badge clip or fob. A single 2-second press triggers the full emergency response sequence in under two seconds. No phone call, no unlocking, no speaking required.
What “Directly Linked” Actually Means
Alyssa's Law requires alerts to reach local law enforcement directly — meaning the signal goes to the Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) or law enforcement radio, not to a school administrator or third-party monitoring center first. Positive Proof delivers direct-to-PSAP dispatch with precise location data, meeting this requirement in every enacted state.
Compliance Documentation
Every alert, drill, and test is automatically logged with timestamp and location data. Positive Proof generates state-specific compliance documentation for district reporting and grant applications — no manual recordkeeping required.
Get Georgia Schools Compliant Before the Deadline
Positive Proof has been building panic alert systems for K-12 schools for 25 years. We confirm your district's specific compliance requirements, configure the solution, and generate the documentation — before your deadline.
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