Toronto Star

Educate public on Amber Alerts, observers say

Professor says calling 911 to express anger over alert is ‘incredibly selfish’

- COLIN PERKEL THE CANADIAN PRESS

Anger at cellphone Amber Alerts that rouse people from their sleep is misplaced and shows the need for more public education, observers said on Tuesday, hours after a mother and child were found safe in Toronto following the latest early-morning alert.

People need to understand that the emergency alerts are only issued when police need help in finding a child they believe is in grave peril — usually the result of an abduction, they said.

Ken McBey, a professor at York University who specialize­s in social and behavioura­l elements in emergencie­s, said those who light up 911 to complain about the alerts are being “incredibly selfish.”

“It’s just one of those trade-offs: it’s a matter of balancing off individual interests for what’s best for society,” McBey said.

“Part of this is actually shaping perception­s. To a certain degree, emergency authoritie­s have a sales job to do. They haven’t done it as well as they could have.”

The latest situation arose shortly before 5 a.m. on Tuesday, when police in the area of Sudbury issued an Amber Alert, sending a cacophonou­s, piercing tone to cellphones along with details of a missing 3-year-old boy and the circumstan­ces of his alleged abduction.

The boy was later found safe with his

mother in the area of Lake Shore Blvd. and Fort York Blvd. in Toronto.

As in the past, some recipients objecting to being disturbed called emergency services to vent their anger. That, in turn, prompted a plea from Toronto police and Mayor John Tory to warn against making such calls to 911 as they could delay response to a real threat. “Being woken up by an Amber Alert is not an emergency,” Tory pointed out in a tweet. Amber Alerts used to be broadcast via mainstream media, bypassing people who weren’t watching television or listening to the radio. Social media helped, but for about a year now, the technology has allowed alerts to be sent to almost all cellphones within a certain geographic area.

Karen Chymy, with the Canadian Centre for Child Protection in Winnipeg, said she’s heard complaints from people upset at the disruption. At the same time, she said, far more people understand the importance and are comfortabl­e with the intrusion.

“It’s new, so people are learning about that system and how it’s being used,” Chymy said. “If it were our own child, we’d want the public to be aware.”

Those who seek to help children say Canadians are fortunate the technology allows alerts to reach so many people so quickly. While they say they understand the annoyance some might feel at being roused from sleep, they note an alert might still be active when those people are up and out.

“This alert is working. It’s finding children, it’s keeping them safe,” Amanda Pick, CEO of Missing Children Society of Canada, said from Calgary. “That should be our answer every day: we will stand together to receive that informatio­n and protect children.”

While individual emergency services make the call on issuing cellphone alerts, avoiding them is generally not possible. Greg Burch with the Canadian Wireless Telecommun­ications Associatio­n said the approach is deliberate and mandated by the federal regulator, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission.

“Given the importance of warning Canadians of imminent threats to the safety of life and property, the CRTC requires wireless service providers to distribute alerts on all compatible wireless devices connected to an LTE network in the target area,” Burch said. “Therefore, it is not possible to opt out of receiving the alerts.” A spokespers­on said the CRTC is not responsibl­e for the distributi­on or content of alerts. However, Patricia Valladao said the commission continues to discuss concerns heard from the public and others.

McBey, of York University, said technology is continuing to evolve and a more refined system of alerts will likely develop. In the interim, he said, people should remember that much of what crosses their smartphone­s every day is trivial compared with an alert.

“An Amber Alert is a pretty important thing for society. You’ve got lives that are in danger,” he said. “It isn’t to wake you up and to irritate you.”

 ??  ?? Karen Chymy, director of operations at the Canadian Centre for Child Protection, says many people are comfortabl­e with the disruption.
Karen Chymy, director of operations at the Canadian Centre for Child Protection, says many people are comfortabl­e with the disruption.

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