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The Integrated Public Alert and Warning System (IPAWS) Get Alerts, Stay Alive 2013 Florida Emergency Notification: Vision Creation Workshop Antwane Johnson, Director, IPAWS

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The Integrated Public Alert and Warning System (IPAWS) Get Alerts, Stay Alive . 2013 Florida Emergency Notification: Vision Creation Workshop Antwane Johnson, Director, IPAWS. VIDEO EMBEDDED – ENABLE CONTENT TO VIEW IN SLIDESHOW FORMAT. RECENT EVENTS. First CMAS/WEA AMBER Alert: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

The Integrated Public Alert and Warning System (IPAWS)

Get Alerts, Stay Alive

2013 Florida Emergency Notification: Vision Creation Workshop

Antwane Johnson, Director, IPAWS

Page 2: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

VIDEO EMBEDDED – ENABLE CONTENT TO VIEW IN SLIDESHOW FORMAT

Page 3: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

RECENT EVENTSFirst CMAS/WEA AMBER Alert:

"I think it is a wonderful idea, if one of mine [child] were missing I would want everyone in

the world looking for them.” -- Donna Miller, December 18, 2012

“Residents in Texas received the first AMBER alert issued through IPAWS' CMAS/WEA system. The alert was issued in cooperation with the San Antonio Police Department and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC).”

-- Emergency Management Blog, December 19, 2012

“As of December 31, the Wireless AMBER Alerts program will end operations, as a part of the nation's transition to the Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) program.

Statistics show that the first three hours after an abduction are the most critical in recovery efforts, and being able to quickly engage the public in the search for an abducted child can help law enforcement bring that child home safely.”

--WMBF, MYRTLE BEACH, SC

Page 4: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

RECENT EVENTSSuper Storm Sandy

“This Emergency Alert just popped up on my phone. Ten seconds later, the TV went out. Here we go…”

— Heidi N. Moore, October 30, 2012

“COOL TECH: Loud alarm and screen alert about #sandy making landfall in NYC.”

— Sree Sreenivasan, October 28, 2012

“As Hurricane Sandy headed for the city two weeks ago, sirens began ringing on some New Yorkers’ cell phones. The alarms were accompanied by messages telling them to stay inside; not to drive; or for those in Zone A, to evacuate. Government officials have been working with wireless carriers to build the alert system, which contacts anyone within an affected geographic area whose mobile devices can get text messages. The storm was the first time the system was used in New York.”

-- New York Times, November 9, 2012

The emergency alerts showed up where and when they mattered.”

-- O’Reilly Radar, October 30, 2012

Page 5: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

RECENT EVENTS

Tornado in Elmira, New York July 26, 2012

“We put out the early warning, people got notice and knew what to do when a tornado approaches. The damage was bad, but we’re happy that no one got hurt, so that’s a success story we feel pretty good about. The more ways we can get the information out, the better the chance people have to be warned.”

– Local NWS SpokesmanStar Gazette, August 1, 2012

“Your warning of a tornado imminent in my area of New York, sent 7/26/12 via text message to my cell, was invaluable! From the bottom of my heart- THANK YOU National Weather Service!”

– Citizen Post on FacebookFCC Blog, August 30, 2012

Page 6: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

RECENT EVENTS“Technology That Keeps Us Safe:

Wireless Emergency Alerts”

“Although Florida was spared a hit from Isaac, we did get a lot of rain. While I am pretty calm in the face of severe weather…keeping the weather channel on tends to make my four year old paranoid.

So instead of watching the weather, we hung out in the play room…from the other side of the house, I heard an unusual ringing. It sounded like an emergency alert ring, but I was sure the TV was off… I headed off to investigate. The TV was off. Could that sound have come from my phone?

It sure did. My Samsung Galaxy S III sent me a text alert letting me know there was severe weather in my area. But this was no ordinary text message, the notification came with a special forced tone alert that overrode my volume setting. How smart is that?!

When I turned on my phone I found a message from the National Weather Service alerting me to a tornado warning in the area. I turned on the TV, and sure enough a tornado warning had just been issued. Now that’s the way technology should work!” http://www.thesuburbanmom.com/2012/08/31/technology-that-keeps-us-safe-

wireless-emergency-alerts/

Page 7: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

Alerting Authorities

Page 8: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

IPAWS is Operational Now!

IPAWS Capabilities online:Public safety officials can choose (optional) to use IPAWS for

integrated distribution of alert and warning information within their jurisdiction

State/Local alerts sent thru IPAWS are distributed to:– Local radio and TV stations participating in local EAS – Cellular phones as Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA)– NOAA for broadcast over local NOAA Weather All Hazards Radio

Now online:Websites and services

– Public alerts published to IPAWS alert feed for distribution by internet information services and applications that choose to monitor IPAWS for alert information

Page 9: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

IPAWS-OPEN Operational COG and MOA Status Report (as of January 24, 2013)

• States and Territories with Operational COGs29

• Counties with Operational COGs108• In Process: State and County MOAs131

List published at: http://www.fema.gov/alerting-authorities/integrated-public-alert-warning-system-authorities

A Collaborative Operating Group (COG) is an organization that is responsible for coordinating emergency management or incident response activities. COGs: May be organized at the national level (e.g., the National Weather Service is a

COG), multi-state level (e.g., regional mutual aid organization), state level, multi-county level, single county level, single municipality, or single agency

Are usually formed by government, although select private sector organization may also form COGs

Page 10: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

IPAWS-OPEN Developer MOA Status Report (as of January 24, 2013)

• Private Sector Developers with IPAWS-OPEN MOAs139

List published at: http://www.fema.gov/private-sector-0

The IPAWS PMO continually engages the private sector to create awareness and understanding of the Common Alerting Protocol (CAP), which can be used by the private sector developers to incorporate existing and future technologies into IPAWS. 

139 vendors currently have access to IPAWS-OPEN and are in some stage of developing IPAWS compliant origination or dissemination alerting tools

Vendors and alerting authorities are invited to the Joint Interoperability Testing Command (JITC) at Indian Head, MD, to test alert origination and dissemination tools and technologies against the CAP standard and IPAWS profile

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Page 12: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

State of Florida – IPAWS Adoption by the Numbers

Applications Complete *FL Florida Division of Emergency ManagementFL Alachua County Emergency ManagementFL Charlotte CountyFL Escambia County Board of County CommissionersFL Gilchrist CountyFL Indian River CountyFL Manatee County GovernmentFL Miami-Dade County Office of Emergency ManagementFL Pinellas CountyFL Santa Rosa County Board of County Commissioners

Applications in Progress *FL City of Tampa Office of Emergency ManagementFL Collier County Sheriff’s OfficeFL Pasco County Board of County CommissionersFL Seminole County Office of Emergency ManagementFL St. Johns County

Successful Completion of EMI IS-247(a) “Integrated Public Alert and Warning System”

by Florida Residents **Federal 14State 83Local 253FEMA 44Military 13

Private Sector 51Other 95

TOTAL 553

* As of January 30, 2013

** As of January 25, 2013

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RECENT EVENTS

Snowmageddon “For D.C. area commuters stuck in snow, ‘it just felt hopeless’”.

A disastrous commute that began early that day and lasted well past midnight.

Thousands of commuters were stranded for hours, and hundreds of cars were abandoned on the road; information to commuters before and during the commute was sparse.

The Washington Metro Council of Governments called for recommendations on: the information systems that gather travel

information development of better ways to relay that

information to the public launching a public education campaign to

stress personal preparedness and the importance of heeding emergency directives

--The Washington Post: 01/28/11

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RECENT EVENTS

Hurricane Rita “Miles of Traffic as Texans Heed Order to Leave”

3.7 million people evacuated from the Houston area and Texas coast and created a100 mile traffic jam that put evacuees in danger as Hurricane Rita approached. This was due in part to:• fear stemming from the memory of Katrina, and • vague and non-targeted evacuation instructions

“Probably the biggest failure of the whole process was communication – people not having their expectations met…if people know they’re going to be in a 20-hour drive, they can prepare for a 20-hour drive. If they think it’s going to be four or five, they… prepare for it with gasoline and water or food.”

At the pinnacle of the evacuation and traffic jam, even after logistical solutions were identified, public safety officials had difficulty communicating information to the public.

--The New York Times: 09/23/06

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RECENT EVENTS

“Colorado Wildfire Deaths Blamed on 911 Malfunction”

Three people in Colorado are dead after an emergency 911 system malfunctioned and failed to alert them to evacuate their homes ahead of a raging wildfire

The three victims had all contacted the Jefferson County 911 system to ask about the fire, but were not told by dispatchers to evacuate, and did not receive the automated notification in time to save their lives

Colorado authorities said they are investigating problems with an emergency notification system because some residents who had signed up to get wildfire warnings never got one. About 12 percent of people failed to get a warning about a wildfire in the mountains southwest of Denver

--(ABC News: 04/04/2012)

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RECENT EVENTS

“East Coast quake causes major cell service

disruptions”

Cell service along the East Coast was spotty following a Virginia-based earthquake that was felt as far away as New England.

There were no reports of downed cell towers or wires, but mobile providers said that millions of people tried to make cell phone calls at the same time, resulting in overwhelmed cellular relay stations.

Cell service disruptions occur during periods of heavy call volumes because of a bottle-necking factor.

Like a highway that gets congested during rush hour, cellular infrastructure is not designed to handle the amount of calling traffic that occurs during emergency situations.

--http://money.cnn.com: 08/23/11

Page 17: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

State and Local Considerations for Adopting and Using IPAWS

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Public Alert and Warning Essentials

The ability to warn the public of imminent danger has been a priorityfor civilizations throughout the world for thousands of years

In ancient times, people would use available tools to alert and warn their groups and villages. These tools included town criers, horns, conch shells, wood sticks, smoke, bells and other devices

We know that effectively warning the American People requires a partnership of people, systems, processes that:

a. effectively receives and shares information; and understands the emergency as it evolves

b. includes strategic governance, a decision making process, and authority to alert and warn

c. provides a method, technologies, and/or device(s) to convey the alert and message

d. builds in robust and regular training for those involved in public alerting and warning

e. provides for exercising and testing

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Public Alert and Warning Essentials

To plan for a public warning program, an authority should consider the following:

Identify your jurisdiction’s vulnerabilities to identify needs and requirement

Identify who is authorized to originate and manage alerts (Emergency Manager, Incident Commander, Watch Officer, Public Information Officer, etc.

Identify and engage with warning partners to seektheir advice and council

Develop clear and repeatable warning policies, guidelines, procedures, training, test and exercise plan

Review and frequently update public warning plans and policies in close coordination with all warning partners

Educate the public on the importance of being informed and the use of warning sources

Test and Exercise Frequently

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Flawed Delivery? Why Alert Notification Systems Sometimes Fall Short

Telephone alerting systems’ main problems can be broken down into two general, yet contradictory, categories:– In some situations, officials did not have residents’ telephone number, making calls impossible– In other cases, something went wrong with the local automated notification system and calls

weren’t delivered, perhaps because local circuit failures can occur during heavy call volume

There are over 331 million wireless telephone subscribers in the US; this is in stark contrast to the number of phone lines in the US, which dropped from 162.7 million in 2008 to 145.8 million in 2011

Throughout the country, cities and counties use public awareness and incentive programs to encourage the public to subscribe to alerts – In two small counties in Colorado, subscription based alerting was just over 2%; in larger

Colorado counties, the subscription rates are not much better– Even in New York City, alert subscription rates are at 12%

CMAS doesn’t send WEA messages through a one-to-one connection as land line and cellphone calls do. Instead, the carriers broadcast the message and the message is picked up by WEA-enabled mobile devices in the area.

CMAS/WEA is just one component of IPAWS – and even as IPAWS grows, it will not replace existing state and local alerting initiatives, but rather enhance them.

By Rick Wimberly, Emergency Management Magazine, September/October 2012 http://www.emergencymgmt.com/

Page 21: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

E.O. 13407 & Presidential Statement of Requirements

Page 22: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

Executive Order 13407 - Public Alert and Warning System “It is the policy of the United States to have an effective, reliable, integrated, flexible, and

comprehensive system to alert and warn the American people in situations of war, terrorist attack, natural disaster, or other hazards to public safety and well-being (public alert and warning system), taking appropriate account of the functions, capabilities, and needs of the private sector and of all levels of government in our Federal system, and to ensure that under all conditions the President can communicate with the American people.”

To implement the policy, the Secretary of Homeland Security shall:[summarized]

I. Inventory, evaluate, and assess …public alert and warning resources;

II. Establish or adopt, … common alerting and warning protocols, standards, terminology, and operating procedures … to enable interoperability and the secure delivery of coordinated messages to the American people through as many communication pathways as practicable,

VI. Ensure the conduct of training, tests, and exercises for the public alert and warning system;

VII. Ensure the conduct of public education efforts

VIII. Consult, coordinate, and cooperate with the private sector,

IX. Administer the Emergency Alert System (EAS) as a critical component of the public alert and warning system; and

X. Ensure that under all conditions the President of the United States can alert and warn the American people.

Page 23: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

1995 Presidential Memorandum “Emergency Alert System (EAS) Statement of Requirements”

“During periods of extreme national emergency, reliable communications are required to enable the President to reassure and give direction to the American people. Consequently, there, is a continuing requirement for a national-level communications capability to serve Presidential needs.”

FEMA shall:I. Act as WHMO’s Executive Agent for the development, operations and maintenance of the

national-level EAS;

II. Bring the PEP system up to full operational capability and ensure compatibility with state and local EAS.

III. Phase out the dedicated circuitry and associated equipment of the Emergency Action Notification network and incorporate the network nodes into the national-level EAS as required.

IV. Prepare guidance concerning the definition and use of Priority Four, and enhance procedures to disseminate National Emergency Information Programming.

V. Conduct tests and exercises.

VI. Ensure the national-level EAS keeps pace with emerging technologies through the use of low-cost innovative techniques.

“The national level EAS must be: Fully integrated from the national to local level, yet capable of independent local (Priority Two) and state (Priority Three) operations

Page 24: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

Emergency Alert System (EAS)

Emergency

Page 25: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

The Evolution of Public Emergency Alerting

Originally called the “Key Station System,” the CONtrol of ELectromagnetic RADiation (CONELRAD) was established in August 1951.

Participating stations tuned to 640 & 1240 kHz AM and initiated a special sequence and procedure designed to warn citizens.

IPAWS modernizes and integrates the nation’s alert and warning infrastructure.

Integrates new and existing public alert and warning systems and technologies thru adoption of new alert information exchange format - the Common Alerting Protocol or CAP

Provides authorities a broader range of message options and multiple communications pathways

original timeline info borrowed from: The Broadcast Archive by Barry Mishkind, The Eclectic Engineer

EBS was initiated to address the nation through audible alerts. It did not allow for targeted messaging.

System upgraded in 1976 to provide for better and more accurate handling of alert receptions.

Originally designed to provide the President with an expeditious method of communicating with the American Public, it was expanded for use during peacetime at state and local levels.

EAS jointly coordinated by the FCC, FEMA and NWS.

Designed for President to speak to American people within 10 minutes.

EAS messages composed of 4 parts:

• Digitally encoded header

• Attention Signal• Audio Announcement• Digitally encoded end-

of-message marker

Provided for better integration with NOAA weather and local alert distribution to broadcasters

CONELRAD EBS EAS IPAWS1951 - 1963 1963 - 1997 1997 - - - - - - - - present -

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National Emergency Alert System (EAS)

IPAWS Architecture with National EAS

Alert Aggregator/ Gateways

IPAWS OPEN

FEMA PEP StationsPresident • XM Siris Radio• NPR• Premier Radio Networks

FEMA Operations

Centers

Page 27: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

Emergency Alert System (EAS) Participants

• Radio and Television broadcast stations, cable operators, satellite radio and television service providers and wireline video service providers)~19,970

• Cable Operators~6,088• Satellite Radio and Television, Wireline Video

Service, and other providers~10

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• Percent of the US (States and Territories) Population within the broadcast coverage of a PEP Station• IPAWS’ Goal is 90% coverage by the end of 201386.6%

• PEP Stations online• 38 “legacy” stations• 25 new stations (9 still under construction)• 4 auxiliary stations - NPR, XM, 2 Premier Networks locations

(auxiliary station population coverage not measured)

67• PEP Stations in planning, construction or implementation

phase11

FEMA Primary Entry Point (PEP) StationsAs of December 31, 2012

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LEGACY STATIONS

Call Sign Location E S Call Sign Location E S Call Sign Location E S1 WBAL Baltimore, MD P P 15 KTWO Casper, WY P P 29 WQDR(FM) Raleigh, NC P P2 WCOS-FM Columbia, SC P P 16 KWDZ Salt Lake City, UT P P 30 WRXL(FM) Richmond, VA P P3 WTAM Cleveland, OH P P 17 WABC New York, NY P P 31 WSM Nashville, TN P P4 KBOI Boise, ID P P 18 WBAP Fort Worth, TX P P 32 WJOX Birmingham, AL P P5 KCBS San Francisco, CA P P 19 WBZ Boston, MA P P 33 WTIC Hartford, CT P P6 KERR Polson, MT P 20 WCCO Minneapolis, MN P P 34 WWL New Orleans, LA P P7 KFLT Tucson, AZ P 21 WFLF Pine Hills, FL P P OCONUS / OTHER STATIONS8 KFWB Los Angeles, CA P 22 WHAM Rochester, NY P P 35 WKAQ San Juan, PR P P9 KFYR Bismarck, ND P P 23 WHB Kansas City, MO P P 36 WSTA Charlotte Amalie, VI P P

10 KIRO Seattle, WA P P 24 WJR Detroit, MI P P 37 HEOC Honolulu, HI P11 KKOB Albuquerque, NM P P 25 WLS Chicago, IL P P 38 KFQD Anchorage, AK P P12 KKOH Reno, NV P P 26 WLW Cincinnati, OH P P 39 NPR Washington, DC P P13 KOA Denver, CO P 27 WMAC Macon, GA P P 40 XM Washington, DC P14 KTRH Houston, TX P P 28 WMSI-FM Jackson, MS P P 41 PREMIERE Los Angeles, CA P

41 PREMIERE San Antonio, TX P

Call Sign Location E S Call Sign Location E S Call Sign Location E S42 WOKV Jacksonville, FL (Day) P P 57 KWKH Shreveport, LA P42 WOKV Jacksonville, FL (Night) P P 58 KDKA Pittsburgh, PA P 69 WCHS Charleston, WV43 WMRV Endicott, NY P P 59 WSFL-FM New Bern, NC 70 KDWN Las Vegas, NV P P44 WBT Charlotte, NC P P 60 WVUV Fagaitua, AS P 71 WSRV-FM Gainesville, GA P45 KRMG Tulsa, OK P P 61 KMOX St. Louis P 72 WAQI Miami, FL P P46 WHO Des Moines, IA P P 62 KROD El Paso, TX P 73 WGAN Portland, ME P47 WJXB(FM) Knoxville, TN P 63 WROW Albany, NY P48 WTAR Norfolk, VA P P50 WTMJ Milwaukee, WI P Construction In-Progress UNFUNDED STATIONS51 WFED Wheaton, MD P P Call Sign Location E S Call Sign Location E S52 KLBJ Austin, TX P P 64 WJCW Johnson City, TN P 74 WHEN Syracuse, NY53 KMJ Fresno, CA P P 65 KRVN Lexington, NE P P 75 KTWG Agana, Guam54 WMUU-FM Greenville, SC P 66 KOPB-FM Portland, OR 76 KPXP Saipan, CNMI55 KFI Los Angeles, CA P 67 KPNW Eugene, OR 77 WIP Philadelphia, PA56 KOGO San Diego, CA P P 68 WREC Memphis, TN 78 KAAY Little Rock, AR PE Operational ENDEC installed (67 at PEP stations)S SATCOM equipment installedS SATCOM equipment installation is planned (14)

Scheduled for Modernization (BOLD Green = completed Modernization)

KFWB will come off once KFI is on-line; coverage remains the same

Construction Complete (cont.)Construction Complete In-Progress EXPANSION STATIONS

Page 30: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

New PEP Station Modular Configuration

Page 31: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

Commercial Mobile Alerting SystemWireless Emergency Alerts

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Commercial Mobile Alert System/Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA/CMAS) Carriers

As of December 31

• Wireless Carriers Online• Includes: VZW (~108M subscribers) AT&T (~103M

subscribers Sprint (~55M subscribers) T-Mobile (~34M subscribers)55

• Carriers Opted-In to CMAS112 Status

“FCC Regulatory start” date for wireless carriers was April 7, 2012

Early launch of capability to NYC completed in Dec 2011

Carrier network readiness and handset availability varies

Carrier is the only source of info for network/handset status info

Page 33: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) / Commercial Mobile Alert System (CMAS)

IPAWS is the only way emergency managers can access the Commercial Mobile Alert System (CMAS) to send Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA)

Enables authorized public safety officials to send 90 character, geographically targeted, emergency alerts to cellular phones in a danger zone

Uses “cell broadcast” technology to avoid network congestion

Cellular carrier participation voluntary– 112 carriers have opted-in

Citizens may opt-out of receiving alerts– New phones are delivered opted-in

Significantly Different from SMS/email based alerting systems

– Not subscription based -- true location based alerting

– Sends alerts to phones in an area - not to a database of phone numbers

– For “Alerts” only…. not for notification type messages

– Only for emergencies categorized as:• Imminent Threat (Severity, Urgency, Certainty)

• AMBER / Child Abduction Emergency• Presidential (*** Cannot Opt-Out ***)

CMAS capability is free to alerters and alertees – no usage or text message charges

CMAS is the result of Public-Private Partnership FEMA, FCC and Cellular Carriers

Page 34: The Integrated  Public Alert and Warning  System (IPAWS)  Get Alerts, Stay Alive

Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) (As advertised by Carriers)

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WEA Compatible Phones so far…

Verizon Wireless Verizon Wireless cont’d Sprint T-Mobile

• Apple® iPhone® 4• Apple® iPhone 4S• Apple® iPhone 5• BlackBerry Bold™ 9930• BlackBerry Curve™ 9310• BlackBerry Curve 9330• BlackBerry Torch™ 9850• Casio GZ One Commando®• Casio GZ One Ravine®• DROID Incredible by HTC• DROID Incredible 4G LTE by H

TC• HTC Rhyme™• Rezound™ by HTC• Thunderbolt™ by HTC• HTC Trophy™• LG Cosmos™ 2• LG Enlighten™• Lucid™ by LG• LG Revere™

• Revolution by LG• Motorola Barrage™• Motorola Citrus™• Droid 2 by Motorola• Droid 2 Global by Motorola• Droid 4 4G by Motorola• Droid Bionic by Motorola• Droid Pro by Motorola• Droid Razr by Motorola• Droid Razr Maxx by Motorola• Droid X by Motorola• Droid X2 by Motorola• Pantech Hotshot™• Pantech Jest™ 2• Pantech Marauder™• Samsung Brightside™• Samsung Convoy™ 2• Droid Charge by Samsung• Samsung Fascinate™• Samsung Galaxy S® III

• Sanyo Inuendo• Sanyo Vero• Sanyo Milano• HTC EVO 3D• Samsung Galaxy SII 4G Touch• LG Marque• Kyocera DuraMax• Kyocera Duracore• Kyocera Brio• Samsung Trender• HTC EVO Design 4G• Samsung Transform Ultra

• T-Mobile myTouch• T-Mobile myTouch Q• T-Mobile Prism• Huawei Summit• LG DoublePlay• LG Optimus L9• Nexus 4• Nokia Lumia 710• Nokia Lumia 810• Samsung Galaxy S Blaze 4G• Samsung Galaxy S II• Samsung Galaxy S III• Samsung Galaxy Note• Samsung t159• Samsung Galaxy Note II• Samsung Galaxy S Relay 4G• HTC One S• Windows Phone 8X by HTC

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WEA Compatible Phones so far…

AT&T US Cellular CELLCOM CRICKET• Motorola Atrix 2 (mb865)• Samsung Galaxy SII (SGH-

i777)• Samsung Captivate Glide

(SGH-i927)• Motorola Atrix 2 (mb865)• Samsung Galaxy Appeal (SGH-

i827)• AT&T Fusion 2 (Huawei U8665)• Alcatel 510A• BlackBerry 9360, 9810, 9860,

9900• Alcatel 871A

• Samsung Character R640• BlackBerry Curve 9350• BlackBerry Torch 9850• LG Freedom• Motorola Electrify 2• Motorola Electrify M• Samsung Chrono 2• Samsung Freeform 4• Samsung Galaxy Axiom• Samsung Galaxy Note II• Samsung Galaxy S III

• Motorola Milestone X2• LG Converse• LG Optimus Select• Motorola Milestone 3• Samsung Chrono• Samsung Freeform 4• HTC One V• iPhone 5• Motorola Razr Maxx• HTC Desire 4G LTE• Motorola Defy

• Blackberry Curve 9350

AT&Thttp://www.att.com/esupport/article.jsp?sid=KB409415#fbid=EjdkPkCjI_G Sprinthttp://community.sprint.com/baw/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadBody/2811-102-12310/Wireless%20Emergency%20Alert%20FAQ.pdf T-Mobilehttp://www.t-mobile.com/shop/phones/?features=a9140e65-fb7b-42f2-88e5-454b2ed235af Verizon Wirelesshttp://m-support.verizonwireless.com/clc/faqs/Wireless%20Service/emergency_alerts_faq.html US Cellularhttp://www.uscellular.com/uscellular/support/faq/faqDetails.jsp?topic=wireless-emergency-alerts.html#Q1 CELLCOMhttp://www.cellcom.com/faq_qa.html?categoryid=19#323 CRICKEThttp://www.mycricket.com/support/topic/commercial-mobile-alert-system-cmashttp://goo.gl/E6dPD

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NOAA Integration

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• Number of Alerts issued by National Weather Service to IPAWS (June 1 – December 31, 2012)~256K

• CMAS Alerts Meeting Criteria and Were Delivered to WEA Enabled Cell Phones (June 1 - December 31, 2012)2047

• NWS CAP Alerts via IPAWS for EAS* (June 1 – December 31, 2012)~54,000

NOAA Weather Radio alerting capability (HazCollect NWEM) Sep 2011− Allows States, locals, tribal, territorial authorities to send alerts/warnings via NWR

NOAA began sending CMAS/WEA Alerts June 1, 2012

Integration with NOAA

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Internet Services

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Internet Services / Applications

Internet web services and applications that choose may request access to monitor and retrieve public alerts in CAP format from IPAWS

− IPAWS Public Alerts Feed is on-line as of September 2012 Services then post or distribute emergency alerts information

− e.g. Google.org Public Alerts web page publishes active alerts retrieved from NOAA and the USGS at www.google.org/publicalerts

Weather Channel App Developers

Social Media, AOL, etc….

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Several of the States the IPAWS Program Management Office has communicated with expressed willingness to

Publish IPAWS information in their emergency management newsletters Post information about IPAWS on their State emergency management website Provide a link to the IPAWS website from their website Host the IPAWS 5 minute video on their website CALIFORNIAhttp://www.calema.ca.gov/TechnologyOperations/Pages/IPAWS.aspxCalifornia has a website for explaining the benefits of IPAWS, provides guidance on how to sign up for IPAWS and applying for grants. IDAHOhttp://www.bhs.idaho.gov/Pages/Operations/WarningSystems/PDF/ISAWS%20Booklet%20(final).pdfIdaho has a operations booklet going through their implementation from October of 2011. Idaho has taken IPAWS and made their own Idaho State Alert & Warning System that incorporates all of the aspects of IPAWs.   INDIANAhttp://www.in.gov/dhs/files/HR_April_final2.pdfIndiana’s April version of Indiana’s newsletter highlights the benefits to emergency managers and the people of Indiana of implementing IPAWS. IOWAhttp://www.iowahomelandsecurity.org/documents/releases/2012/RELEASE_061812.pdfIowa’s HSEMD July release that explains CMAS, the benefits of it and how they are applying to implement it in Iowa. 

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Several of the States the IPAWS Program Management Office has communicated with expressed willingness to

Publish IPAWS information in their emergency management newsletters Post information about IPAWS on their State emergency management website Provide a link to the IPAWS website from their website Host the IPAWS 5 minute video on their website  NEBRASKAhttp://www.nema.ne.gov/pdf/beacon/2012_july_beacon.pdfNebraska’s July 2012 newsletter to Emergency Managers discusses: (1) who is in the approval process for becoming an alerting authority through IPAWS; (2) explains to their county EMs the benefits of IPAWS; (3) describes where they are in the MOA process, and (4) details the steps they are going to take to implement IPAWS upon approval.

MINNESOTAhttps://dps.mn.gov/entity/srb/committees/Pages/integrated-public-alert-warning-system-committee.aspx https://dps.mn.gov/divisions/hsem/Documents/Mn%20IPAWS%20Feb%202012%20newsletter.pdf Minnesota has a full newsletter dedicated to IPAWS, educating Minnesota’s emergency managers about IPAWS. WISCONSINhttp://emergencymanagement.wi.gov/searchresults.asp?cx=008667487286405463389%3Akn2b7dkyhus&cof=FORID%3A10&ie=UTF-8&q=ipawsWisconsin has posted a FEMA Regional presentation highlighting the benefits of IPAWS.  

 

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EMI Independent Study course for Alerting Authorities (IS-247a)

EMI Independent Study course for Alerting Authorities available on-line

As of November 30, 5820 people have completed IS-247/IS-247a

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IPAWS’ American People on-line course

The online course for the American People is currently in development; it is anticipated to be launched early 2013.

The American People course is designed to educate the public and demonstrate the relevance and importance of IPAWS in their lives before, during, and after a disaster.

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IPAWS Grant Language

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FEMA IPAWS Language in Federal Grant Programs

Funding from the Homeland Security Grant Program (HSGP) and the Tribal Homeland Security Grant Program (THSGP) may be used to enhance existing or establish new alert and warning programs

Organizations seeking grants are encouraged to contact FEMA Grants Office and IPAWS Office prior to initiating program activities

– program guidance, tools, resources and updates are available– contact IPAWS Office at [email protected]

Grants can be used for planning and equipment purchases– Planning: development or enhancement of public alert and warning plans, interoperability

governing bodies, development or enhancement of alert and warning assessments and inventories, development or enhancement of alert and warning protocols, planning for emerging technologies

– Equipment: design, construction , implementation, enhancement, replacement, and maintenance of emergency response communications systems and equipment, planning procurement and deployment of emerging technology systems

Remember, FEMA grant business is done through the State---counties, locals, private entities, etc. must go through/coordinate with the State to obtain grant funds

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RECENT EVENTS

“Italy: 7 Negligent In Quake Warning”

“An Italian court convicted seven scientists and experts of manslaughter Monday for failing to adequately warn residents before a temblor struck central Italy in 2009 and killed more than 300 people.

The seven defendants were accused of giving ‘inexact, incomplete, and contradictory information’ about whether small tremors felt by L’Aquila residents in the weeks and months before the quake should have constituted grounds for a quake warning

The court in L’Aquila also sentenced the defendants to six years in prison. All are members of the national Great Risks Commission.

Ilaria Carosi, sister of one of the victims, told Italian state TV that officials must be held responsible ‘for taking their job lightly’”. (Associated Press: 10/23/2012)

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For more information

Email the IPAWS inbox: [email protected]

IPAWS Website: http://www.fema.gov/ipaws/

EMI Independent Study Course IS-247a: https://training.fema.gov/EMIWeb/IS/is247a.asp

Mailing list for IPAWS Webinar notices:http://service.govdelivery.com/service/subscribe.html?code=USDHSFEMA_165

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Contact Information

Wade WitmerDeputy Director

IPAWSNational Continuity Programs

U.S. Department of Homeland Security500 C Street SW, Room 506Washington, DC 20472

202.646.2523 [email protected]@fema.gov

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QUESTIONS?