Why Accuracy Matters
In a dense urban landscape, accurate gunfire location must distinguish gunfire from construction noise, vehicle backfires, celebratory fireworks, or other abnormal high-decibel events. Only systems that have undergone extensive SAFETY Act effectiveness testing can consistently achieve this, delivering exact shooter location (indoor room, outdoor grid, or vertical floor) while ignoring the thousands of daily non-threat events. This proven accuracy is why leading venues, campuses, and critical infrastructure increasingly require DHS-evaluated solutions.
Learning more about gunfire location for subways
The fastest way to understand gunfire location options is a 15-minute discovery call with a DHS SAFETY Act approved technology representative. You’ll receive a customized threat map showing high-risk zones in subways and learn which gunfire location solutions have already been deployed by peer organizations under identical regulatory and liability concerns.
How to choose the right gunfire location for subways
Choosing gunfire location for subways starts with one non-negotiable: DHS SAFETY Act coverage. Only approved systems have undergone rigorous independent testing for accuracy across indoor, outdoor, and vertical environments. Insist on seeing the actual Designation or Certification letter—then compare documented detection speed, false-alarm rate, and vertical precision specific to subway’s building types.
Other considerations for gunfire location in subways
Beyond accuracy, subway decision-makers must consider liability exposure. Only DHS SAFETY Act-covered gunfire location provides statutory caps or elimination of third-party claims following an attack. Without this protection, even the most accurate system leaves venues like schools and businesses vulnerable to lawsuits claiming the technology “should have done more.”
Learn More about SAFETY Act-approved gunfire location