The ability to broadcast emergency alerts to the public has been in place in one form or another for nearly seven decades. In August 1951, the Control of Electronic Radiation (CONELRAD) system was launched; it leveraged AM radio frequencies to send out alerts. A dozen years later the Emergency Broadcast System (EBS), which utilized television frequencies, was born; its original purpose was to enable the president to speak directly to the American public in times of crisis, such as the “who is going to blink first?” nuclear showdown between the United States and the Soviet Union that occurred a year earlier.
In 2006, the Integrated Public Alert and Warning System (IPAWS) emerged. As its name implies, IPAWS integrates several alerting platforms, as follows:
It should be noted that IPAWS is not an alerting platform; rather, it enables authorized alerting authorities to simultaneously push out alerts to the public via multiple distribution media. It also does not represent the alpha and omega of emergency alerting—for instance, an emergency management agency that is authorized to use IPAWS shouldn’t abandon its other tools like tornado siren system.
But IPAWS is a very important tool in the emergency management toolbox because it speeds getting the message out to the public when a disaster has occurred or, more importantly, before it occurs, which gives people more time to get out of harm’s way—which is critical when a tornado or wildfire is bearing down on them.
Consequently, every alerting authority from coast to coast should be taking steps to become an authorized IPAWS user, if they haven’t done so already.
Becoming authorized involves a handful of easily executable steps, as follows:
You can learn more about IPAWS and how it works as part of your alert and notification plan during our July webinar, "Integrating IPAWS Into Your Public Alert & Notification Plan." Space is limited. Register today.