Wireless Devices to Get Emergency Alerts
Editor: The last several years have brought some expansion of emergency
alerting systems at the local level; Reverse 911 systems are being
developed, and they are capable of communicating with a variety of devices.
Now the Federal government is getting into the act, with a new Emergency
Alert system that can notify any device that is capable of receiving a text
message. Thanks to bhNEWS for this story.
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We interrupt your cell phone call with this important announcement: The
government will soon be sending warnings of national emergencies on wireless
phones, Web sites and hand-held computers. The new digital system will
update the emergency alerts planned -- but never used -- during the Cold War
in the event of a nuclear strike. More likely, these 21st-century
technologies will carry warnings of natural disasters and terrorist attacks.
The Homeland Security Department, through the Federal Emergency
Management Agency, expects to have the system working by the end of next
year. Though still in its pilot stages, the system is being demonstrated
Wednesday at a public television station in suburban Virginia.
The Association of Public Television Stations is partnering with FEMA to
transmit the alerts to receiving networks ranging from wireless devices,
cable TV channels and satellite radio to traditional broadcast outlets.
"Anything that can receive a text message will receive the alert," Homeland
Security Department spokesman Aaron Walker said Tuesday. "We find that the
new digital system is more secure, it's faster, and it enables us to reach a
wide array of citizens and alert them to pending disasters."
In 1951, President Harry Truman created the nation's first alert system,
which required radio stations to broadcast only on certain frequencies
during emergencies. That evolved into the test on TV and radio stations that
solemnly intoned: "This is a test of the emergency broadcast system. This is
only a test."
Only the president can order a national emergency alert. The system was
initially designed to warn Americans of a nuclear attack. But President Bush
last month ordered Homeland Security to extend the alert "for situations of
war, terrorist attack, natural disaster or other hazards to public safety
and well-being."
Alerts to head to Gulf Coast states first
The public TV stations have so far raised $1.1 billion -- a third of it
from the federal government -- to convert antiquated technology at its 176
stations to digital systems that can transmit the alerts, APTS President
John Lawson said.
Overall, the new warning system is expected to cost $5.5 million to test
and deploy nationally and $1 million annually to maintain, Walker said. The
government has been testing the system in the Washington area since October
2004, Lawson said, and earlier this year expanded its pilot program to 23
public television stations nationwide. It will be rolled out to the public
and emergency responders in stages, beginning in Gulf Coast states that were
heavily damaged by hurricanes last year and later in major cities. Peter P.
Swire, chief privacy counselor during the Clinton administration and law
professor at Ohio State University, questioned whether the alerts might "be
like spam or a telemarketing call" to people who don't want them. "Before
the broadcast happens, people should likely have a choice whether to receive
it," Swire said.
Walker said consumers will have a chance to opt out of the alerts. Some
glitches remain as telephone companies and other networks grapple with
potentially trying to alert all of their customers at the same time without
jamming their systems, Lawson said. But the alerts could be transmitted by
text messages, audio recordings, video or graphics, he said, opening the
possibility of sending out additional detailed information to specific
sectors, like hospitals or emergency responders.
For alerting regular Americans, "we're hoping that your cell phone will
go off saying something bad is happening, and you need to get to a TV or
radio to find out what's going on," Lawson said.