National Post (National Edition)

CODING ERROR BOTCHES TEST OF CANADA’S NEW EMERGENCY PUBLIC ALERT SYSTEM.

- Emily JaCkson

TORONTO • Officials botched the first widespread test of Canada’s new emergency public alerting system on Monday, blaming a technical glitch for the shaky rollout of the system designed to deliver emergency alerts over LTE wireless networks.

Emergency officials from federal, provincial and territoria­l government­s have long delivered emergency alerts to the public in partnershi­p with Canadian broadcaste­rs, led by The Weather Network owner Pelmorex Corp. But last year, the Canadian Radiotelev­ision and Telecommun­ications Commission mandated wireless carriers participat­e as well. In theory, the new system will be able to take advantage of ubiquitous wireless technology — there are about 31 million wireless subscripti­ons in Canada — to distribute targeted warnings depending on a user’s location.

The trial run was scheduled to start Monday. The CRTC told Ontario and Quebec residents they would receive a test alert with a unique vibration, ambulance-like sound and text message.

But the test did not go as planned in Quebec. In Ontario, only some received an alert even if their device was compatible, leaving many questionin­g how the Alert Ready system would function in a real emergency.

Pelmorex, which was responsibl­e for the tests along with emergency management officials, blamed a coding error for the failure in Quebec.

“A space incorrectl­y included in the coding prevented the Alert Ready system from sending the Quebec test message to compatible wireless devices,” Pelmorex stated on alertready.ca.

“The purpose of a test alert is to comprehens­ively verify all system components so that in the case of a real threat to life situation, there is confidence the emergency alerts will be distribute­d successful­ly. The mis-configurat­ion was quickly corrected.”

Pelmorex said the Ontario test would proceed as planned, but it didn’t. It did not respond by this newspaper’s deadline to questions about what went wrong in Ontario.

Representa­tives from wireless carriers BCE Inc., Rogers Communicat­ions Inc. and Telus Corp. said they were investigat­ing why some customers did not receive the test alert. The CRTC is monitoring the situation. “These tests are conducted to ensure that the alerting system is functional,” the CRTC stated.

Consumers cannot opt out of receiving public alerts on their wireless devices.

It’s unclear whether officials will conduct another test in Ontario and Quebec. The rest of Canada is scheduled to receive test alerts on Wednesday. Canadians can check if their wireless devices are compatible at alertready. ca.

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