Clarity Under Pressure: Technology, Trust, and the Future of Public Safety


 

When something goes wrong in a community—a major storm, a large-scale accident, a violent incident—there’s often a narrow window where clarity matters most. Leaders must make fast decisions, responders need to trust the information in front of them, and the systems supporting those choices have to work as intended. Public safety agencies now rely heavily on real-time data, advanced mapping, and telecommunications networks. These tools are shaping the future of public safety, while intensifying pressure on both the systems and the people who rely on them. The question is no longer whether technology plays a role, but whether it truly supports the people making high-stakes decisions under pressure.

With real-time crime centers, GIS mapping, and predictive analytics becoming standard tools, public safety leaders face a deeper challenge: how do you modernize without overwhelming those who must act on that information? Where does technology genuinely create clarity—and where can it introduce new risk if trust breaks down?

Those questions anchor this episode of Waypoints Unlocked, hosted by Randall René, Principal Advisor and founder of Waypoint 33. René sits down with Scott Hewetson, founder of the Hewetson Group and a veteran law enforcement leader, to explore how clarity, trust, and leadership intersect across public safety and telecommunications. Together, they examine what those intersections mean for the future of public safety. Drawing from decades of shared experience in military service, law enforcement, and critical infrastructure, the conversation looks at how leaders can prepare for the worst while staying grounded in purpose and people.

What you’ll learn…

  • How situational awareness has evolved from radios and paper maps to real-time crime centers, drones, and integrated data platforms.

  • Why proactive planning and visualization tools help agencies anticipate crises instead of reacting blindly.

  • How leadership, calm, and trust determine whether technology becomes a force multiplier—or a liability—during critical incidents.

Scott Hewetson is a retired Police Commander and certified security leader with more than three decades of experience across law enforcement, municipal security, healthcare security, and risk management. His career spans frontline policing and executive leadership, including overseeing patrol and investigations, launching behavioral threat assessment teams, managing critical government and hospital facilities, and advising organizations on preparedness, policy, and security operations. A U.S. Air Force veteran and CSSM credential holder, Hewetson now leads the Hewetson Group, where he helps public and private sector clients strengthen security programs, mitigate risk, and protect people and assets.

Article written by MarketScale.

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