The Signal

Emergency messages set for testing

- By Austin Dave Signal Director of Digital Operations

A nationwide test of two federal alert systems is planned for this week, Federal Emergency Management Agency officials announced.

The Wireless Emergency Alerts and Emergency Alert System tests are being conducted in coordinati­on with the Federal Communicat­ions Commission and slated for 11:18 a.m. and 11:20 a.m. Wednesday.

“The test will assess the operationa­l readiness of the infrastruc­ture for distributi­on of a national message and determine whether improvemen­ts are needed,” a FEMA news release stated.

The Wireless Emergency Alerts system is commonly used to issue warnings about dangerous weather conditions, missing children and other critical situations through alerts on cellphones, FEMA stated in a news release.

The Emergency Alert System is a national warning system used by the president of the United States to address the nation during a national emergency via radio, television broadcaste­rs, cable systems and satellite radio, the release stated.

Radio, TV, cable stations and wireless carriers will conduct the test with cell towers across the country — broadcasti­ng the message for 30 minutes.

Owners of cellphones powered on and connected to carriers participat­ing in the wireless program can expect to receive the test message. Each phone will receive the message once.

“Both test messages will begin with, ‘This is a test,’ and end with, ‘No action is needed,’” a FEMA spokeswoma­n said in a public safety announceme­nt video posted to the agency’s YouTube page.

Previous Emergency Alert System national tests were conducted in November 2011, September 2016 and September 2017.

“Public safety officials need to make sure when an emergency or disaster happens, they have a process and system that will send out important alerts and warnings to the public,” the spokeswoma­n said.

The test was originally planned for Sept. 20, but was postponed to Wednesday due to response efforts related to Hurricane Florence.

“Testing the public alert and warning system once in a while is a way for us to make sure the infrastruc­ture for broadcasti­ng a national message is ready and able to send the message successful­ly and help us decide what improvemen­ts we need to make,” the spokeswoma­n said.

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