School safety mapping laws & grants in Nevada
Not yet. Nevada requires emergency operations plans and periodic first-responder walkthroughs, but no law makes schools share digital floor plans or campus maps. That gap is an opening: districts that map now give responders something the statute never thought to require, ahead of the rest of the state.
Nevada requires schools to maintain emergency operations plans (NRS 388.243) and to give first responders periodic walkthrough tours (NRS 388.910), but it has NO law requiring schools to provide digital critical-incident maps, accurate floor plans, or interoperable campus-mapping data to first responders. Mapping is therefore not mandated, only general emergency planning is.[1]
Why Nevada schools need this now
Nevada asks only for a responder walkthrough every three years, which captures a campus on a single afternoon and nothing after. None of its 762 schools are required to share digital maps, so the districts that build one now hand responders something the statute never imagined, viewable from any cruiser the moment they arrive at a building they have never set foot in.
Grants that help Nevada schools pay for it
Districts often combine state and federal programs to fund first-responder mapping, AI threat detection, and emergency communications. We list only currently open or recurring programs; amounts and deadlines change, so confirm each at its official source before applying.
Federal programs (available nationwide)
See full details on each federal funding program, including eligibility, deadlines, and how each can apply to responder-ready mapping.
From paper plans to a map responders can actually use
A walkthrough every three years tells responders what a campus looked like on one afternoon. Ark gives them a live 3D digital twin instead, scanned in a single day and viewable from any cruiser or dispatch console through RapidSOS, already wired into the vast majority of US 911 centers. Static PDFs go stale the moment a building changes, and they cannot be shared live with arriving units.
Ark Strategic builds a live 3D digital twin of a campus from a LiDAR and drone scan, often completed in a single day though larger campuses can take longer, with every room, exit, utility shutoff, AED, and access point labeled. Responders reach it two ways, neither of which requires anything new to install: through RapidSOS, the platform already connected to the vast majority of US 911 centers, or in any web browser, since the twin runs in the cloud. Either way, your 911 center and on-scene units see the campus inside tools they already have.
A flat floor plan tells responders where the walls are. A digital twin shows them where to go. The platform and setup are bundled into one deployment, often grant-funded, so there is no separate software line item for the district. See how the K-12 platform works.
Nevada school safety, answered
New to the terms? See the school safety mapping glossary for plain-language, sourced definitions, or the national FAQ for the questions districts ask most.
Every claim, cited
We do not ask you to take our word for any of this. Each numbered citation above links to its primary government source below, with the date we last verified it. Programs and deadlines change, so confirm current rules at the source. How we verify.
- Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 388 (System of Public Instruction), Nevada Legislature (official .gov) verified 2026-06-23
- COPS Office - School Violence Prevention Program (official program page) verified 2026-06-23
- U.S. Department of Education - Project SERV (official program page) verified 2026-06-23
Neighboring states
School safety mapping varies by state line. See where the states next door stand.
See how the rest of the West region compares on school safety mapping.
The Nevada brief, on one page
A printable summary of Nevada’s mapping mandate, the grants that fund it, the buyer-side standard, and a district readiness checklist. Built to forward to your board.
- → Mandate status and key deadlines
- → State and federal grants that pay for it
- → Readiness checklist, every claim cited
Get your free Nevada grant & readiness review
A free 15-minute review of which Nevada mapping grants your district qualifies for and how a live digital twin would work for your campus.
- → First responder pre-registration included
- → One scan, one school day, zero disruption to classes
- → Grant guidance for Nevada districts