The Standard (St. Catharines)

Don’t ignore alerts — fix on the way

Technology exists to correct flaws in ‘Alert Ready’ system to target alarm location, importance

- NICOLE THOMPSON

TORONTO — The technology exists to fix some of the design flaws in Canada’s mobile emergency alert system that was tested this month for an Amber Alert issued in Ontario, experts say.

The “Alert Ready” program — which sounds an alarm on LTE-connected smartphone­s during a crisis — could be more effective at alerting people to emergencie­s, they said.

“The approach we’re taking with mobile devices is the same we had in 1940, when we had sirens installed on buildings,” said Cosmin Munteanu, a professor of computer science and informatio­n at the University of Toronto. “There’s no nuance involved.” He said with smartphone technology, designers had a chance to cater details of the alarm — its sound, the colour that pops up on the screen — to the emergency it’s alerting people to.

Munteanu said that with the system as it is now, people who hear the blaring alarm associated with these emergency alerts for a missing child, but don’t have an opportunit­y to read the text for some reason might believe they’re in imminent danger.

And in fact, several police services in Ontario received complaints from members of the public last week when an alarm sounded on cellphones to announce an Amber Alert triggered by the disappeara­nce of a boy outside of Thunder Bay.

Half an hour later, the sound rang out again. This time, the text of the alert was displayed in French. It would go off two more times — once in each official language — that day to announce the child was found safe.

Officers in two Ontario cities — Kingston and Guelph — tweeted that it was not appropriat­e to call 911 about the matter.

The incident left some questionin­g the inclusion of Amber Alerts in the mobile emergency system, which has no opt-out option in Canada, as mandated by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission.

“If somebody in Toronto is alerted to an abducted child or a missing child in Thunder Bay, they can’t help,” said John Rainford, director of The Warning Project, founded by a group of experts who help organizati­ons communicat­e in emergencie­s.

“But then also, that person in Toronto is like, ‘OK, next time my phone rings in this weird sound, I don’t care,’” he said. “And I want them to care.”

A similar system exists in the United States, but people can choose not to receive notificati­ons about Amber Alerts or local emergencie­s by modifying settings on their cellphones. They cannot, however, opt out of receiving directives from the White House.

But Rainford said it’s a good thing that these kinks are happening now, before the masses need to be informed of a crisis on a larger scale.

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