Sunday, February 11, 2018

WEAKNESS IN NATIONAL ALERT SYSTEM

   Last month’s bogus ballistic missile warning in Hawaii and, now, this week’s tsunami snafu have highlighted trouble spots and prompted calls for change in the nation’s increasingly complex system for alerting Americans about dangerous weather, active shooters, kidnapped children, plant explosions and other emergencies.
   Both incidents have prompted calls for reform, including better training for emergency workers in charge of sending alerts.
   More than 1,000 federal, state and local government agencies have the ability to issue emergency alerts through an array of federally managed communications networks. It is a patchwork system that usually works as intended but can wreak havoc when it doesn’t.

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