The Denver Post

PRESIDENTI­AL ALERT COMING TO A PHONE NEAR YOU

Vail tried out FEMA messaging system that will be tested in state Wednesday

- By Elise Schmelzer

Tens of thousands of cellphones will buzz Wednesday around noon as FEMA tests the national messaging system .»

Tens of thousands of phones throughout Colorado will buzz almost simultaneo­usly Wednesday as national emergency officials test a system that allows the president to contact the nation through cellphones in case of an emergency.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency will send a text to all cellphones connected to the Wireless Emergency Alert system at 12:18 p.m. Wednesday. The nationwide test is the first of its kind for the program that will allow the president to contact tens of millions of people across the country.

Officials in Vail conducted a local test of the system in May, one of a handful of locations to do so. Denver emergency management staff also tested the system on Sept. 5, and they expected to reach about 1 million people.

The Vail test was a success and an opportunit­y to learn valuable lessons, said Jennifer Kirkland, 911 operations administra­tor at the town’s Public Safety Communicat­ions Center.

The test showed that not everyone in the designated area received the text. Kirkland was standing in the communicat­ions center in the middle of Vail when the message was sent. The phones of the people around her started to buzz and emit a loud blare.

“Everyone around me got the text, but I didn’t,” she said.

Others in town also didn’t get the message, she said, but the agency couldn’t determine why.

“There was nothing that we could pinpoint about why or why not you get the text,” she said.

Other recipients heard the tone but did not get the text, according to a survey conducted by Vail Public Safety Communicat­ions.

The nationwide text on Wednesday will have a header that reads “Presidenti­al Alert” and a brief message about the test, according to FEMA. Phones that are not on silent will make the same tone as they do when they receive tornado warnings or an Amber Alert. The test was originally scheduled for Sept. 20, but officials postponed it because of Hurricane Florence.

Here are some things to know before Wednesday’s test:

• No, you can’t opt out. You can decide to no longer receive regional notificati­ons; a 2006 law prohibits users from opting out of a Presidenti­al Alert.

• A Presidenti­al Alert has never been sent before. Text alerts have been sent for regional weather and other emergencie­s, but a president has never used the system.

• The president has to direct the agency to send an alert, but FEMA officials have to activate the message and send it out.

• Receiving the alert does not allow the government to know your location.

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