Connecticut Startup to Donate Wearable Safety Technology to American School for the Deaf Offers New Reward for Final Days of Kickstarter Campaign

Hartford's Wearsafe Labs (www.wearsafe.com) is offering a new reward for the final days of its Kickstarter campaign which allows backers to donate 3 Wearsafe Tags and a year of free service with each Tag to the American School for the Deaf.

Connecticut Startup to Donate Wearable Safety Technology to American School for the Deaf Offers New Reward for Final Days of Kickstarter Campaign
Hartford, CT, August 17, 2015 --(PR.com)-- Wearsafe Labs, (www.wearsafe.com), a Connecticut-based startup developing advanced wearable personal safety products, is proud to announce it is teaming up with the American School for the Deaf whose mission is to enhance the quality of life of those who are deaf or hard of hearing.

“For someone who is deaf or hearing impaired, seeking help through the traditional 911 system can prove to be incredibly challenging,” says David Benoit, Co-Founder of Wearsafe Labs. “The Wearsafe platform stands to revolutionize the way this community seeks help.”

The company has set up a reward on Kickstarter which allows backers to donate Wearsafe Tags to the American School for the Deaf. These donations will help the ASD, which has been changing lives since 1817, to create the most safe campus environment possible for its students.

“We want to empower people to live their lives the way they want to live it,” adds Benoit. “The Wearsafe technology allows those who are already vulnerable to feel safer and more secure in whatever they are doing. We couldn’t be more humbled by the opportunity to support this extraordinary American Institution.”

The Wearsafe Tag, which will be released early this fall, can clip onto almost anything and uses one discreet touch of a button with a range of up to 200 feet from a user’s smartphone. When activated, a selected network instantly receives an alert through email, text and their Wearsafe app, a group chat is started and the network can see where someone is with the GPS information provided as well as hear audio from the location. Users can also receive tactile confirmation to let them know their alert has been received. If additional assistance is needed, network members can call 911 directly from within the app.

Wearsafe is in the final days of its Kickstarter campaign, a platform being used to allow the company to take its first steps in their journey to save 10 million lives in 10 years (#10millionlives). “For us, saving lives goes beyond those which would have been lost, but also those which might otherwise be irreparably altered by a bad experience,” says Benoit. “We can empower, connect and protect the people we love and help to keep each other safe. People have the option to donate Tags to the American School for the deaf by visiting our Kickstarter campaign: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/wearsafe/wearsafe-wearable-technology-on-a-mission-to-save?ref=email. By choosing the new $100 reward level the school will receive three Wearsafe Tags, each with a year of service.”

“The American School for the Deaf is excited to partner with Wearsafe, a local Hartford company who has developed technology that we think has the potential to enhance the communication capabilities for deaf and hard of hearing people in emergency situations,” says Rennie Polk, Assistant Director of Institutional Advancement for the American School for the Deaf.

To learn more about the American School for the Deaf, please visit http://www.asd-1817.org/
Contact
Bonner Consulting Group
Michelle Bonner
860-817-1418
www.bonnercg.com
michelle@wearsafe.com
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