Marathon Day, Patriots’ Day, and the Weight of Accountability

In Boston, Marathon Day and Patriots’ Day are inseparable. It is a day that reflects who we are as a city. Our history, our resilience, and our deep sense of community. The streets fill with runners, families, volunteers, first responders, and neighbors. It is a celebration, but it is also a day that asks us to pause and reflect.
Last week, across the country and here in Boston especially, we remembered the lives lost in the Boston Marathon bombing. That remembrance matters. For those of us who call Boston home, this day carries a weight that never fully fades. It reminds us that when people come together peacefully in public spaces, they are placing real trust in the people responsible for keeping them safe.
For me, this is not abstract. I lost a close friend on 9/11, and I experienced a near miss at the Marathon myself. Those moments changed how I see the world and how I think about responsibility. They reinforced something I believe deeply. Safety is personal. Every choice made, or not made, affects real people and real families.
Accountability in public safety is not about any one organization or solution. It is shared. Cities, event operators, law enforcement, security teams, and technology partners all have a role to play. And each of us has an important role to play. To be aware of our surroundings and take our personal safety, personally. There is no finish line and no single answer. Protecting people in large, open environments requires constant commitment, collaboration, and the willingness to keep learning and improving.
At Evolv, that sense of accountability drives everything we do. It shapes how we think about layered security, how we support the people on the front lines, and how we protect public spaces without changing what makes them meaningful. But accountability also means remembering why this work exists in the first place. We honor those who were lost, the survivors, and the first responders who ran toward danger.
On Patriots’ Day, in our hometown of Boston, that commitment feels especially personal. And it is one we carry with us not just on Marathon Day, but every day people gather to run, cheer, celebrate, and simply be together.

