KidPrint ID keeps vital info at your fingertips.

Parents can pick up a free card at community events, while police and city offices can now run the system themselves through the new Print & Protect grant.
For Parents
Every minute counts when a child is missing. A KidPrint ID puts the facts an officer needs—photo, physical description, fingerprint—right in your wallet.
- What’s on the card?
- Color photo, height, weight, eye and hair color
- Clean fingerprint for quick confirmation
- Simple crisis checklist on the back
- How to get a card
- Pick an event from our schedule.
- Fill out the short online form.
- Drop by the booth; we print and laminate in just minutes.
- Update the card each year as your child grows.

For Law-Enforcement & Municipal Partners
Parents love KidPrint, but they can’t always wait for a fair or safety day. The Print & Protect grant lets your agency run the system year-round.
A brief story: When the Wood County Sheriff’s Office added the KidPrint machine, deputies issued more than 1,000 cards the first summer. Families stopped by the lobby, church picnics, even farmers markets—anywhere an officer could set up a folding table and plug in a laptop.
What the grant supplies
- KidPrint printer, camera, fingerprint scanner, starter cards and ribbon
- Step-by-step setup guide and virtual training
- Ongoing tech support from Total ID Solutions ([email protected], 440-944-6000)
Your commitment
- Produce at least 100 cards a year
- Store the equipment safely and reorder supplies as needed
- Track yearly totals and email them to Justice for Sierah ([email protected])
FAQs
Is the parent card really free?
Yes. Donations and funds raised at our events cover the cost.
Do you keep my child’s data?
It is up to the individual if they want us to keep their information, which would only be used to update the cards more quickly in the future.
How long does printing take?
Less than five minutes per child.
Who fixes the gear if something breaks?
Total ID Solutions handles repairs and replacement parts.