Tools
Software for high-stakes work. Each tool starts with an operational problem, captures the judgment behind the work, and turns it into a repeatable system staff can use with confidence.
ClearStreet
A street-name screening tool for addressing teams and 911 dispatch safety. When a builder proposes a new road name, ClearStreet scores it against every existing road and every cataloged candidate using phonetic, string, and rule-based similarity. Names that sound confusably close to existing roads get flagged before they enter the centerline.
Built around the rules an experienced addressing reviewer already follows: same MSAG community, address-range separation, alias-aware type matching. The policy shows up on the page so builders know what staff will check before they hit submit.
ClearStreet began as a practical solution to a real public-sector workflow: catching confusable names early enough to protect dispatchers, responders, and residents from avoidable ambiguity. It is now the current proof case for Praxis Scribe's product model: build from the field, separate the product cleanly, and make the value usable beyond the first organization.
Other tool patterns
The same method applies to monitoring, operational readiness, and planning systems: take the checks an experienced operator would run anyway, make them continuous or easier to review, and surface the right signal before the problem becomes expensive.
NetSentinel and ORIS represent adjacent directions in that pattern: infrastructure visibility, operational response intelligence, and decision support for leaders who need more than another dashboard.
Working on a tool problem?
If your team's decision-making depends on judgment that should be consistent across staff and shifts, and a system would help, talk to us. We are especially interested in problems where the current process works only because a few experienced people are carrying it in their heads.