Los Angeles Times

Deficienci­es in a federal emergency alert system lead to calls for upgrades

- BY ALENE TCHEKMEDYI­AN, PHIL WILLON AND JOSEPH SERNA

Widespread complaints that residents did not receive cellphone alerts before wildfires swept through California’s wine country, destroying thousands of homes and killing more than 40 people, has prompted calls to improve the system.

The so-called Wireless Emergency Alert system allows authoritie­s to push out warnings that trigger loud alarms and vibrations to cellphones in geographic areas, unless people specifical­ly opt out.

But neither Sonoma County nor Napa County sent them.

Now, as the North Bay reels from the devastatio­n, California’s two U.S. senators have raised questions about deficienci­es in the federal system after many wine country residents failed to get warnings that they were in the path of last week’s destructiv­e wildfires.

Because of the system’s imprecise

geo-targeting capabiliti­es, the Democratic senators wrote, authoritie­s have to decide whether to notify too many people — or not nearly enough — when disaster strikes.

In a letter dated Tuesday to the chairman of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, Sens. Kamala Harris and Dianne Feinstein said authoritie­s instead relied on alert systems that were far less effective.

“These emergency services are caught in a bind between notifying individual­s in imminent danger and risking mass panic,” the senators wrote. “As a result, these services are compelled to rely on emergency messaging systems with far less reach and far less capacity.”

The senators wrote that they were disappoint­ed the FCC had not fully implemente­d a 2016 proposal to require wireless carriers to enable more precise geo-targeting for emergency alerts.

“We are also concerned that the FCC has granted a temporary waiver of the existing, imprecise geo-targeting requiremen­ts for certain carriers,” they wrote.

The senators asked FCC Chairman Ajit Pai to get feedback from officials in Northern California, as well as those who responded to Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Jose, about how the system should be improved.

When the fires erupted, some residents had minutes to escape. Neighbors pounded on one another’s doors and blasted car horns. Friends called friends and urged them to get out. Some couldn’t outrun the flames.

Meanwhile, Sonoma County officials contemplat­ed sending out a mass alert. Ultimately, they decided not to out of concern it would have pinged every cellphone connected to a cell tower in the county. They worried about unnecessar­y gridlock on streets far from the fire impeding first-responders trying to reach threatened areas.

Instead, the county sent out warnings through its SoCoAlert service and Nixle, which require residents to register before an emergency. It also sent out reverse 911 calls to landlines in unincorpor­ated areas.

Santa Rosa, where rows of suburban tract homes were destroyed, sent out alerts through SoCoAlert, Nixle and on social media.

Napa County issued alerts through Nixle, but officials said some residents had trouble receiving the warnings.

By Tuesday, the string of wildfires raging for more than a week had scorched more than 210,000 acres and destroyed whole neighborho­ods. Dozens of people are still missing.

Fire crews have, however, turned a corner in battling the blazes, reaching more than 50% containmen­t on the four largest wildfires. Tens of thousands of residents were allowed to return home, and at least one hospital reopened.

The 52,894-acre Nuns fire, which gave firefighte­rs the most trouble over the weekend, was 78% contained.

A smaller, stubborn fire that ignited Saturday near the Oakmont neighborho­od on the eastern edge of Santa Rosa burned 1,029 acres and was 27% contained as of Tuesday evening.

Officials told firefighte­rs to be meticulous about extinguish­ing smoldering piles of grasses and leaves because higher winds expected later Tuesday could send embers into unburned areas, igniting new fires.

“Mop-up’s going to be the key. As we get to the point where the perimeter’s controlled, all the stuff inside needs to be controlled 100%,” said Don Watt, a fire behavior analyst for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

The biggest danger to firefighte­rs over the next few days is fatigue, which has set in after eight long, smoky days of firefighti­ng, officials told crews in Sonoma on Tuesday morning.

“You guys have been in warp drive,” said Bret Gouvea, the Cal Fire incident commander. “Now the adrenaline is coming off. You’re feeling the fatigue. You’re getting tired. Let’s finish this thing strong, without any major accidents.”

alene.tchekmedyi­an@latimes.com phil.willon@latimes.com joseph.serna@latimes.com Willon reported from Santa Rosa, Serna from Calistoga and Tchekmedyi­an from Los Angeles. Times staff writers Laura J. Nelson in Santa Rosa and Rong-Gong Lin II in Los Angeles contribute­d to this report.

 ?? MARCUS YAM LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? A SANTA ROSA mobile-home park leveled by fire. Many wine country residents didn’t receive warnings that they were in the path of wildfires.
MARCUS YAM LOS ANGELES TIMES A SANTA ROSA mobile-home park leveled by fire. Many wine country residents didn’t receive warnings that they were in the path of wildfires.
 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? SANTA ROSA’S fire-ravaged Coffey Park neighborho­od. A federal alert system’s lack of precise targeting led authoritie­s to use systems that were far less effective.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times SANTA ROSA’S fire-ravaged Coffey Park neighborho­od. A federal alert system’s lack of precise targeting led authoritie­s to use systems that were far less effective.

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