Alyssa’s Law is named after Alyssa Alhadeff, a 14-year-old student who lost her life in the 2018 Parkland school shooting. The law was created to do one thing: shorten the time between an emergency on a school campus and the arrival of first responders. It requires schools to install silent panic alarms that connect directly to local law enforcement — so help is on the way the moment a button is pressed, without anyone needing to find a phone, dial a number, or explain what’s happening.
The law first passed in New Jersey in 2019 and has since been adopted or proposed in Florida, New York, Texas, Tennessee, Utah, and a growing list of other states. The specifics vary by state — what kind of system qualifies, which buildings are covered, and when the deadline hits — but the goal is the same everywhere: faster response, clearer communication, and a safer campus. For schools, that means choosing a system that meets the letter of the law and actually works the moment it’s needed.
Alyssa’s Law requires schools to install silent panic alarms that connect directly to law enforcement. The goal is simple: cut response time when every second counts. The details — wiring, devices, integrations, monitoring — are ours to handle. You get a system that works the moment you need it.
Veeya started in schools. We know your bell schedules, your buildings, your budgets, and your boards. When something breaks, we’re not learning your campus from scratch — we already know it.