Local Government
Skin checks across every depot and crew
Parks, roads, waste, water — your outdoor teams are spread across the municipality. Flare lets them all send a skin check to the nominated clinician without coordinating a single clinic day.
Why councils struggle with screening
Local government outdoor crews are spread across parks, roads, waste, water, and building services — each running different rosters from different depots. Coordinating a screening clinic means picking a location that's convenient for nobody, losing a day of productivity, and still missing the crews who were on leave or on a different shift. Councils that try usually screen the same 30% of workers every year while the rest go unchecked.
Who's affected
Outdoor roles across local government:
How it works
From phone to clinician in under two minutes.
Your worker snaps a photo
Workers open the Flare app on their phone, photograph a concerning spot, and mark where on their body it is. Under two minutes, from anywhere — on site, at home, or between rosters. No Wi-Fi or mobile signal? The app queues it securely and sends it automatically when connectivity returns.
It goes straight to their clinician
The photo and worker details are sent directly to the employer's nominated clinician — the doctor or practice they already trust. Nothing is stored on any server. The image passes through in transit only.
Worker gets confirmation instantly
The worker receives an email confirming their check was delivered to the clinician, with the clinician's name and contact details. The employer sees only aggregate delivery data — no photos, no health information.
“We have 14 depots — there was no way to get everyone to one clinic. Now they send a photo from wherever they are.”