BETA · Find a Safe Place Intel is live for review. The dossier engine wiring lands next; the form, prompt contract, and worked sample are public now so you can see the shape.
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Family Safety Dossiers

A safety dossier for the family that's actually moving.

Find a Safe Place Intel turns one short form into a sourced, dated neighborhood safety dossier — written for your household, not a generic buyer. Bottom line first, then the numbers, then what the streets actually feel like, then what specifically matters for you, then what to verify in person before you sign anything.

How it's different from a real-estate listing: we don't sell you on a neighborhood. We tell you what's true, with sources and dates next to every claim. If the data is thin, we say so. If your situation needs a route you can walk at 7:30 AM with a 7-year-old, that's what the report addresses — not square footage.

Build a dossier for your household

Six short questions: where you're considering, who's in the household, your top safety concern, school-age range, how you actually get around, and your move-in window. The dossier reads completely differently for a single parent walking a kindergartener vs. a retired couple — so we ask first instead of guessing.

Read a worked example

A fully-rendered dossier for Sam Hughes, Tucson — written for a single parent with a 7-year-old daughter, walks-mostly mobility, walk-to-school as the priority concern. Every section of the output contract is shown the way you'd actually receive it.

What every dossier contains

Same sections, same order, every time. Predictability is part of the trust.

Bottom line

2–4 sentences answering your priority concern, written for your household profile. If the data is thin, we say so here first — not buried at the end.

What the numbers say

Up to six bullets. Each bullet is one claim + one number + one source + one date. Stale or modeled numbers carry an inline tag so you can weigh them honestly.

What the streets say

Two or three paragraphs on lived texture — sidewalk condition, lighting, who's out at 7 AM, school dropoff dynamics, weekend feel — sourced from analyst walkthroughs and public-post skims.

For your household specifically

The section that matters most. We re-read your household, mobility, school-age, and priority concern, then write only about what's load-bearing for this family.

What to verify in person

3–6 specific actions you can take before signing — walk this route on a Tuesday at 7:30, call this front office, drive this arterial at this hour. Not vague worries.

Sources + confidence

Every source cited, with retrieval date and URL. A confidence-and-freshness line: highest and lowest data point dates, in one line you can scan.

House rules we operate under

Excerpted from the master prompt we publish openly. Same transparency principle as /methodology — you should see the rails before you trust the engine.

Common questions

Is this a professional risk assessment?

No. It's research for a family making a personal decision — not an insurance, lending, or hiring input. The dossier exists to make your in-person visit more useful, not to replace it.

What neighborhoods do you cover?

Tucson neighborhoods at launch. If you ask for somewhere outside our current coverage, the dossier will tell you so honestly rather than make things up. Coverage expands as the ingestion pipeline (FBI UCR + Tucson PD + AZ DOE + CRDC + AZ DOT + OpenStreetMap + sex-offender registry) lights up each region.

What data do you actually use?

See /our-sources for the full inventory with publisher, cadence, and last refresh date. Crime: FBI UCR/NIBRS + Tucson PD open data. Schools: AZ Department of Education report cards + federal CRDC (school arrests, restraint, chronic absenteeism). Walk-to-school: OpenStreetMap sidewalks + AZ DOT pedestrian crashes. Plus Census ACS, the AZ sex-offender registry, and on-the-ground analyst walkthroughs.

What about my privacy?

No Google Analytics. No third-party trackers. Cookieless aggregate analytics only. Your dossier inputs are not stored, sold, or shared. If we later add an "email me the dossier" feature, it'll be explicitly opt-in and the email won't be used for anything else. See /about for the full privacy promise.

Does the form actually generate a dossier today?

Not yet — we're in beta. Today the form captures and echoes your inputs so you can see the contract. Live model wiring is the next milestone. The reason we shipped the form + prompt + sample before the engine: the contract is the trust artifact. If you can't see the rails, you can't trust the train.

Who is behind this?

Find a Safe Place is operated by Alpha Tech Solutions LLC, doing business as The Noble Glitch — based in Tucson, Arizona. NAP contact: (805) 900-0032 · hello@findasafeplace.com. See /about for the longer version.

Ready to build your dossier?

Six short questions. No account. No tracking. You'll see what you'd be sending the engine before you submit.

Start the builder →