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Emergency Alert System

The Emergency Alert System (EAS) is a national warning system in the United States designed to allow authorized officials to broadcast emergency alerts and warning messages to the public via cable, satellite, or broadcast television, and both AM/FM and satellite radio.

Emergency Alert System
The Emergency Alert System logo as of December 3, 2007
TypeEmergency warning system
Country
United States
TV stationsAll broadcast television stations and cable systems
Radio stations77 designated Primary Entry Point (PEP) stations. All commercial radio stations
Broadcast area
Varies; nationwide for national activation, limited to 31 counties (and equivalents) or states at a time for regional activation
Launch date
January 1, 1997
ReplacedEmergency Broadcast System

The EAS became operational on January 1, 1997, after being approved by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in November 1994,[1] replacing the Emergency Broadcast System (EBS). Its main improvement over the EBS, and perhaps its most distinctive feature, is its application of a digitally encoded audio signal known as Specific Area Message Encoding (SAME), which is responsible for the "screeching" or "chirping" sounds at the start and end of each message. This signal encodes locations an alert applies to, useful for specialized encoding and decoding equipment at broadcasting stations to automatically filter alert messages that do not apply to the area and to relay messages that do.

Like the EBS, the system is primarily designed to allow the President of the United States to address the country via all radio and television stations in the event of a national emergency. Despite this, neither the system nor its predecessors have been used in this manner. The ubiquity of news coverage in these situations, such as during the September 11 attacks, has been credited to making usage of the system unnecessary or redundant.[2] In practice, it is used at a regional scale to distribute information regarding imminent threats to public safety, such as severe weather situations (including flash floods and tornadoes), AMBER Alerts, and other civil emergencies.

It is jointly coordinated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The EAS regulations and standards are governed by the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau of the FCC. All broadcast television, broadcast and satellite radio stations, as well as multichannel video programming distributors (MVPDs), are required to participate in the system.

The EAS is a front-end to the Integrated Public Alert and Warning System (IPAWS), which coordinates the distribution of alert information via multiple channels including the EAS, such as Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA), using the Common Alerting Protocol (CAP).[3]

Technical concept

Messages in the EAS are composed of four parts: a digitally encoded Specific Area Message Encoding (SAME) header, an attention signal, an audio announcement, and a digitally encoded end-of-message marker.

 
A Sage EAS ENDEC unit

The  SAME header  is the most critical part of the EAS design. It contains information about who originated the alert (the president, state or local authorities, the National Weather Service (NOAA/NWS), or the broadcaster), a short, general description of the event (tornado, flood, severe thunderstorm), the areas affected (up to 32 counties or states), the expected duration of the event (in minutes), the date and time it was issued (in UTC), and an identification of the originating station.

There are 77 radio stations designated as National Primary Stations in the Primary Entry Point (PEP) System to distribute presidential messages to other broadcast stations and cable systems.[4]

The National Emergency Message (formerly known as the Emergency Action Notification) is the notice to broadcasters that the president of the United States or their designee will deliver a message over the EAS via the PEP system.[5] The government has stated that the system would allow a president to speak during a national emergency within 10 minutes.[6][7]

List of Primary Entry Point stations[8]
Operational area Station Citations
National NPR, PRN, SXM
United States Virgin Islands WSTA [9]
Puerto Rico WKAQ [10]
Maine WGAN [11]
NH, VT, MA, RI WBZ [12][13][14][15]
Connecticut WTIC [16]
NYC, New Jersey WABC [17]
Northeast New York WROW
South Central New York WBNW-FM [17]
North Central New York WHEN
Western New York WHAM [17]
Delaware, Eastern PA WTEL, WHYY-FM [18]
Western Pennsylvania KDKA [19]
West Virginia WCHS [20]
Maryland WBAL [21]
District of Columbia WFED [22]
Eastern Virginia WTAR
Central Virginia WRXL [23]
Western Virginia WPLY
Eastern North Carolina WSFL-FM
Central North Carolina WQDR-FM [24]
Western North Carolina WBT
South Carolina WCOS-FM [25]
Georgia WMAC, WSRV [26]
North Florida WOKV [27]
Central Florida WFLF [27]
South Florida WAQI [27]
Alabama WJOX [28]
Mississippi WMSI-FM
East Tennessee WJCW, WJXB-FM [29]
Middle TN, SW Indiana WSM [29][30]
West Tennessee WREC [29]
Kentucky, SW Ohio, SE IN WLW [31][32]
Northeast Ohio WTAM [32]
Michigan WJR [33]
NW IN, Northern Illinois WLS [30][34]
Southern IL, Eastern Missouri KMOX [30][35]
Wisconsin WTMJ [36]
Minnesota WCCO [37]
Iowa WHO [38]
Western Missouri, Kansas WHB [35]
Arkansas KAAY
Southeast Louisiana WWL [39]
Northwest Louisiana KWKH
Central Texas KLBJ [40]
North Texas WBAP, KSCS [40]
Southeast Texas KTRH [40]
West Texas KROD [40]
Oklahoma KRMG
Nebraska KRVN [41]
North Dakota KFYR [42]
Montana KERR [43]
Wyoming KTWO [44]
Colorado, South Dakota KOA [45]
New Mexico KKOB
Arizona KFLT [46]
Utah KSL [47]
Idaho KBOI
Northern Nevada KKOH
San Diego area KOGO [48]
Southern California KFI, KNX [48]
Central California KMJ [48]
Northern California KCBS [48]
Hawaii HEMA [49]
American Samoa WVUV-FM
Guam and Northern Marianas KTWG
Oregon KOPB-FM, KPNW [50]
Washington KIRO [51]
Alaska KFQD [52]

Primary Entry Point stations

The National Public Warning System, also known as the Primary Entry Point (PEP) stations, are a network of 77 radio stations that are, in coordination with FEMA, used to originate emergency alert and warning information to the public before, during, and after incidents and disasters. PEP stations are equipped with additional and backup communications equipment and power generators designed to enable them to continue broadcasting information to the public during and after an event.[53][54][55]

Beginning with WJR-Detroit and WLW-Cincinnati in 2016, FEMA began the process of constructing transportable studio shelters at the transmitters of 33 PEP stations, which feature broadcasting equipment, emergency provisions, a rest area, and an air filtration system. NPWS project manager Manny Centeno explained that these shelters were designed to "[expand] the survivability of these stations to include an all hazards platform, which means chemical, biological, radiological air protection and protection from electromagnetic pulse."[53][54][55]

Communication links

The FEMA National Radio System (FNARS) "Provides Primary Entry Point service to the Emergency Alert System", and acts as an emergency presidential link into the EAS. The FNARS net control station is located at the Mount Weather Emergency Operations Center.[56]

Once an EAN is received by an EAS participant from a PEP station (or any other participant) the message then "daisy chains'" through the network of participants. "Daisy chains" form when one station receives a message from multiple other stations and the station then forwards that message to multiple other stations. This process creates many redundant paths through which the message may flow increasing the likelihood that the message will be received by all participants and adding to the survivability of the system. Each EAS participant is required to monitor at least two other participants.

EAS header

Because the header lacks error detection codes, it is repeated three times for redundancy. EAS decoders compare the received headers against one another, looking for an exact match between any two, eliminating most errors which can cause an activation to fail. The decoder then decides whether to ignore the message or to relay it on the air if the message applies to the local area served by the station (following parameters set by the broadcaster).

The SAME header bursts are followed by an attention tone, which lasts between 8 and 25 seconds, depending on the originating station. The tone is  1,050 Hz  on a NOAA Weather Radio station. On commercial broadcast stations, a  "two-tone"  attention signal of 853 Hz and 960 Hz sine waves is used instead, the same signal used by the older Emergency Broadcast System. These tones have become infamous, and can be considered both frightening and annoying by viewers; in fact, the two tones, which form approximately the interval of a just major second at an unusually high pitch, were chosen specifically for their ability to draw attention, due to their unpleasantness on the human ear. The SAME header is equally known for its shrillness, which many have found to be startling. The "two-tone" system is no longer required as of 1998, and is to be used only for audio alerts before EAS messages.[57][full citation needed] Like the EBS, the attention signal is followed by a voice message describing the details of the alert.

The message ends with 3 bursts of the AFSK "EOM", or End of Message, which is the text NNNN, preceded each time by the binary 10101011 calibration.

IPAWS

 
A Gorman-Redlich rack mounted CAP-to-EAS converter which translates CAP formatted alerts into SAME headers.

Under a 2006 executive order issued by George W. Bush, the U.S. government was instructed to create "an effective, reliable, integrated, flexible, and comprehensive" public warning system. This was accomplished via expansions to the aforementioned PEP network, and the development of the Integrated Public Alert and Warning System (IPAWS)—a national aggregator and distributor of alert information using the XML-based Common Alerting Protocol (CAP) and an internet network. IPAWS can be used to distribute alert information to EAS participants, supported mobile phones (Wireless Emergency Alerts), and other platforms.[58]

Under an FCC report and order issued in 2007, EAS participants would be required to migrate to digital equipment supporting CAP within 180 days of the specification's adoption by FEMA. This officially occurred September 30, 2010, but the deadline was later delayed to June 30, 2012 at the request of broadcasters.[59]

The FCC has established that IPAWS is not a full substitute for the existing SAME protocol, as it is vulnerable to situations that may make internet connectivity unavailable. Therefore, broadcasters must convert CAP messages to legacy SAME headers to enable backwards compatibility with the existing "daisy chain" method of EAS distribution, providing a backup distribution path.[59][60]

In December 2021, the FCC issued a notice of proposed rulemaking seeking to prioritize the display of alert audio and text from CAP messages, in order to provide higher quality audio (rather than simulcasting the audio off-air from a radio station) and improve parity between the visual display and alert audio for the benefit of the hard of hearing.[61] The rules were enacted in September 2022.[62]

Station requirements

The FCC requires all broadcast stations and multichannel video programming distributors (MVPD), hereafter "EAS participants", to install and maintain FCC-certified EAS decoders and encoders at their control points or headends. These decoders continuously monitor the signals from other nearby broadcast stations for EAS messages. For reliability, at least two source stations must be monitored, one of which must be a designated local primary. Participants are to retain the latest version of the EAS handbook.

EAS participants are required by federal law to relay National Emergency Messages (EAN, formerly Emergency Action Notification) immediately (47 CFR Part 11.54).[63] Broadcasters traditionally have been allowed to opt out of relaying other alerts such as severe weather, and child abduction emergencies (AMBER Alerts) if they so choose. In practice, television stations with local news departments will usually interrupt regularly-scheduled programming during newsworthy situations (such as severe weather) to provide extended coverage.[64]

If possible, EAS participants must transmit the audio,[62] and (where applicable) a visual display containing the extended text, from the associated CAP message.[59][60]

EAS participants are required to keep logs of all received messages. Logs may be kept by hand but are usually kept automatically by a small receipt printer in the encoder/decoder unit. Logs may also be kept electronically inside the unit as long as there is access to an external printer or method to transfer them to a computer.

System tests

All EAS equipment must be tested on a weekly basis. The required weekly test (RWT) consists, at a minimum, of the header and end-of-message tones. Though an RWT does not need an audio or graphic message announcing the test, many stations provide them as a courtesy to the public. In addition, television stations are not required to transmit a video message for weekly tests. RWTs are scheduled by the station on random days and times, (though quite often during late night or early afternoon hours), and are generally not relayed.[57][full citation needed]

 
A Required Monthly Test (RMT) transmitted in New Jersey on April 15, 2014, as shown on a television set

Required monthly tests (RMTs) are generally originated by the local or state primary station, a state emergency management agency, or by the National Weather Service and are then relayed by broadcast stations and cable channels. RMTs must be performed between 8:30 a.m. and local sunset during odd numbered months, and between local sunset and 8:30 a.m. during even numbered months. Received monthly tests must be retransmitted within 60 minutes of receipt.[57][65] Additionally, an RMT should not be scheduled or conducted during an event of great importance such as a pre-announced presidential speech, coverage of a national/local election, major local or national news coverage outside regularly scheduled newscast hours or a major national sporting event such as the Super Bowl or World Series, with other events such as the Indianapolis 500 and Olympic Games mentioned in individual EAS state plans.

An RWT is not required during a calendar week in which an RMT is scheduled. No testing has to be done during a calendar week in which all parts of the EAS (header burst, attention signal, audio message, and end of message burst) have been legitimately activated.

In July 2018, in response to the aftermath of the false missile alert in Hawaii earlier in the year (which was caused by operator error during an internal drill protocol), the FCC announced that it would take steps to promote public awareness and improve efficiency of the system, including requiring safeguards to prevent distribution of false alarms, the ability to authorize "live code" tests—which would simulate the process and response to an actual emergency, and authorizations to use the EAS tones in public service announcements that promote awareness of the system.[66][67]

Nationwide tests

On February 3, 2011, the FCC announced plans and procedures for national EAS tests, which involve all television and radio stations connected to the EAS, as well as all cable and satellite services in the United States. They are not relayed on the NOAA Weather Radio (NOAA/NWS) network as it is an initiation-only network and does not receive messages from the PEP network.[68][69] The national test would transmit and relay an Emergency Action Notification on November 9, 2011 at 2:00 p.m. EST.[70][71]

The FCC found that only half of the participants received the message via IPAWS, and some "failed to receive or retransmit alerts due to erroneous equipment configuration, equipment readiness and upkeep issues, and confusion regarding EAS rules and technical requirements", and that participation among low-power broadcasters was low. To reduce viewer confusion, the FCC stated that future national tests would be delivered under the new event code "National Periodic Test" ("NPT"), and list "United States" as its location.[72][73]

A second national test, the first classified as an NPT, occurred on September 28, 2016 as part of National Preparedness Month.[74][75] A third national periodic test occurred on September 27, 2017.[76]

The fourth NPT occurred on October 3, 2018 (delayed from September 20, 2018, due to Hurricane Florence). It was preceded by the first mandatory wireless emergency alert test.[77][78][79]

The fifth NPT occurred on August 7, 2019, and moved up from past years to prevent it from occurring during the heart of the Atlantic hurricane season. The test focused exclusively on distribution to broadcast outlets and television providers via the primary entry point network to gauge the efficiency of alert distribution in the event the internet cannot be used.[80][81]

The sixth NPT was postponed to 2021 amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic "out of consideration for the unusual circumstances and working conditions for those in the broadcast and cable industry."[82] The sixth test occurred on August 11, 2021, at 2:20 PM EDT.[83] This test involved the WEA system alongside television and radio.

As of 2022, as part of a clarification and streamlining of terminology used in messages, further NPTs will now be referred to in the test message as a "Nationwide Test of the Emergency Alert System" issued by the United States Government.[84] On May 3, 2022, it was announced that the seventh NPT would not take place during 2022, and instead occur in early 2023.[85]

Additions and proposals

The number of event types in the national system has grown to eighty. At first, all but three of the events (civil emergency message, immediate evacuation, and emergency action notification [national emergency]) were weather-related (such as a tornado warning). Since then, several classes of non-weather emergencies have been added, including, in most states, the AMBER Alert System for child abduction emergencies. In 2016, three additional weather alert codes were authorized for use in relation to hurricane events, including Extreme Wind Warning (EWW), Storm Surge Warning (SSW) and Storm Surge Watch (SSA).

In 2004, the FCC issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPR) seeking comment on whether EAS in its present form is the most effective mechanism for warning the American public of an emergency and, if not, on how EAS can be improved, such as mandatory text messages to cellphones, regardless of subscription. As noted above, rules implemented by the FCC on July 12, 2007 provisionally endorse incorporating CAP with the SAME protocol.

In November 2020, Congress passed the Reliable Emergency Alert Distribution Improvement (READI) Act.[86] First sponsored by Hawaii Senator Brian Schatz in response to the Hawaii false missile alert, it amends the Warning, Alert, and Response Network (WARN) Act to require distribution of wireless alerts issued by the administrator of FEMA, and commands the FCC to establish a means of reporting false alerts, encourage the establishment of State Emergency Communications Committees (SECC) that would meet annually to evaluate their EAS plans, require the repetition of alerts surrounding "emergencies of national significance", and open an inquiry into the feasibility of implementing the EAS on internet-related services.[87][88][89][90][91][92]

Limitations

The EAS can only be used to relay audio messages that preempt all programming; as the intent of an Emergency Action Notification is to serve as a "last-ditch effort to get a message out if the president cannot get to the media", it can easily be made redundant by the immediate and constant coverage that major weather events and other newsworthy situations—such as, most prominently, the September 11 attacks in 2001—receive from television broadcasters and news channels. Following the attacks, then-FCC chairman Michael K. Powell cited "the ubiquitous media environment" as justification for not using the EAS in their immediate aftermath. Glenn Collins of The New York Times acknowledged these limitations, noting that "no president has ever used the current [EAS] system or its technical predecessors in the last 50 years, despite the Soviet missile crisis, a presidential assassination, the Oklahoma City bombing, major earthquakes and three recent high-alert terrorist warnings", and that using it would have actually hindered the availability of live coverage from media outlets.[2][93]

Following the tornado outbreak of March 3, 2019, Birmingham, Alabama NWS meteorologist Kevin Laws told CNN that he, personally, wished that alerts could be updated in real-time in order to reflect the unpredictable nature of weather events, noting that the storm system's unexpected change in trajectory towards Lee County resulted in only a nine-minute warning (the resulting tornado would kill 23 people).[87]

The trend of cord cutting has led to concerns that viewers' lessened use of broadcast media in favor of streaming video services would inhibit their ability to receive emergency information (notwithstanding availability of alerts on mobile phones).[87][88] The READI Act called for an inquiry into the distribution of alerts via internet platforms.[87]

Incidents

False alarms

  • On February 1, 2005 in Connecticut, an alert was mistakenly issued calling for the immediate evacuation of the entire state. The alert contained no specific detail on why it had been issued. The message was broadcast due to operator error while conducting an unannounced, but scheduled statewide test. A study conducted following the incident reported that at least 11% of residents actually saw the warning live, and that 63% of those surveyed were "a little or not at all concerned"—citing a suspicious lack of detail in the message, which a legitimate alert would include. Only 1% of those surveyed actually attempted to leave the state. Connecticut State Police did not receive any calls related to the incident.[94][95][96]
  • On June 26, 2007 at 7:35 a.m. CDT, an Emergency Action Notification was accidentally issued in Illinois, when a new satellite receiver at the state's EOC was accidentally connected to a live system before final internal testing of the new delivery path had been completed. The alert was followed by dead air, and then audio from designated station 720 WGN in Chicago being simulcast across almost every television and radio station in the Chicago area and throughout much of Illinois. A confused Spike O'Dell, host of the station's morning show at the time, was heard on-air wondering "what that beeping was all about".[97][98]
  • On May 19, 2010, NOAA Weather Radio and CSEPP tone alert radios in the Hermiston, Oregon area, near the Umatilla Chemical Depot, were activated with an EAS alert shortly after 5 p.m. The message transmitted was for a severe thunderstorm warning, issued by the National Weather Service in Pendleton, but the transmission broadcast instead was a long period of silence, followed by a few words in Spanish. Umatilla County Emergency Management has stressed there was no emergency at the depot.[99]
  • On September 3, 2016, in the wake of Tropical Storm Hermine, an alert was displayed on television calling for the immediate evacuation of the entirety of Suffolk County, abruptly ending with the incomplete sentence "This is an emergency message from". About 15 minutes after the original message was sent, the alert was re-issued with an addendum clarifying that the alert was actually calling for a voluntary evacuation of Fire Island—a barrier island of Long Island. Officials cited an error in the county's Code Red system; while the correct message was entered into the system, an error processing an abbreviated message for television resulted in the error.[100][101]
  • On May 23, 2017, at around 8:55 p.m. EDT, a Nuclear Power Plant Warning was issued for the Hope Creek and Salem Nuclear Power Plants. The alert was issued for Salem and Cumberland counties in New Jersey. In a statement by the New Jersey State Police, it was a test message, intended for a small group of emergency management personnel who were participating in the test. Due to a coding error, the message was publicly broadcast. This would happen again, in July 2022.[102]
  • On August 15, 2017 at approximately 12:25 a.m. ChST, Guam stations KTWG and KSTO transmitted a civil danger warning for the island; Guam Homeland Security described the message, which interrupted programming on the stations, and was received on television by some viewers, as being an "unauthorized test" of the EAS. The incident's impact was strengthened, as North Korea had threatened the launch of ballistic missiles towards Guam only a few days beforehand. Numerous calls to 911 operators and the Department of Homeland Security were made following the broadcast.[103][104]
 
On January 13, 2018, a false alarm was issued warning of a missile threat to Hawaii.

Cybersecurity breaches

EAS equipment has been the subject of various cyberattacks, caused primarily by participants using insecure or factory default passwords on their encoders and decoders, and outdated software containing unpatched vulnerabilities. On multiple occasions, federal government departments have warned that failure to employ secure passwords and keep software updated made EAS equipment vulnerable to such attacks, which could result in disruptions such as false alerts.[111][112][113][114]

  • In February 2013, the EAS equipment of several stations in Great Falls, Montana and Marquette, Michigan were breached to play a false alert allegedly warning of a zombie apocalypse, using the lines "Civil authorities in your area have reported that the bodies of the dead are rising from the graves and attacking the living" from the Anthrax song "Fight 'Em 'Til You Can't". It was identified that the attack had come from an "overseas" source. Furthermore, the broadcasters had neglected to change the factory default logins or passwords on their equipment. Because of this, the FCC, FEMA, equipment manufacturers, as well as trade groups, including the Michigan Association of Broadcasters, urged broadcasters to change their passwords and to recheck their security measures.[115][116][117][112][113]
    • In a related incident, WIZM-FM in La Crosse, Wisconsin accidentally triggered the EAS on television station WKBT-DT by airing a recording of the false message during its morning show. The relayed audio included the hosts' reactions and laughter to the clip.[118]
  • On February 28, 2017, WZZY in Winchester, Indiana was hacked in a nearly-identical manner, playing the same "dead bodies" audio from the February 2013 incidents. The incident prompted a public response from the Randolph County Sheriff's Department clarifying that there was no actual emergency.[119][120]
  • In January 2020, Security Ledger published an investigation finding that at least 50 EAS decoders by Digital Alert Systems had not been patched for a security vulnerability (use of a shared SSH key) found by IOActive in 2013.[114]
  • On February 20, 2020, the EAS equipment of Washington-based provider Wave Broadband was hacked, causing approximately 3,000 customers in Jefferson County to receive several false alerts (including a "Radiological Hazard Warning"), which contained irrelevant messages (including one suggesting that the provider change its passwords) and alert audio referencing internet memes and websites.[121][122] On March 2 and 3, 2020, a legitimate Required Monthly Test was displayed with a message ("AIGHT IM DONE U CAN REST NOW. MR GERDE WAS HERE") that had also appeared in the hack: a company official stated that this was a remnant of the attack that had not yet been removed.[123][124]

Tone usage outside of alerts

To protect the integrity of the system, and prevent false activations, the FCC prohibits the use of actual or simulated EAS/WEA tones and attention signals outside of genuine alerts, tests, or authorized public service announcements, especially when they are used "to capture audience attention during advertisements; dramatic, entertainment, and educational programs" (even if the footage is documentation of an event where an actual alert was issued).[125] Broadcasters who misuse the tones may be sanctioned (including being required to partake in compliance measures) and fined.[125]

  • Tones from the EAS were used in the trailer for the 2013 film Olympus Has Fallen; cable providers were fined $1.9 million by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on March 3, 2014 for misuse of EAS tones.[126] An event similar to this previously occurred in November 2013, when TBS was fined $25,000 for the use of EAS tones in a Conan advertisement.[127]
  • During the October 24, 2014 episode of the syndicated radio show The Bobby Bones Show, host Bobby Bones played audio from the 2011 national test as part of a rant about a genuine test from Nashville's Fox affiliate, WZTV, that interrupted Game 2 of the 2014 World Series on October 22. The errant Emergency Action Notification was relayed to some broadcasters and cable systems—particularly those not configured to reject EAN messages that did not match the current date. On May 19, 2015, iHeartMedia, who distributes the show and owns its flagship station WSIX-FM, was fined $1 million for the incident. The company was also ordered to implement a three-year compliance plan to avoid any further incidents, including removing all EAS tones or similar-sounding noises from its audio production libraries.[128][129]
  • From August 4 to 6, 2016, Tegna, Inc.-owned NBC affiliate WTLV in Jacksonville, Florida aired an ad several times during NBC's primetime coverage of the 2016 Summer Olympics produced by the marketing department of the National Football League's Jacksonville Jaguars featuring out-of-sequence EAS tones over Jaguars training camp footage and a voiceover noting "this is not a test, this is an emergency broadcast transmission...seek shelter immediately", along with the on-screen text "the storm is coming". The ad aired four times before station compliance authorities pulled the advertisement after the local news industry blog FTVLive criticized the station for carrying it, especially during the peak of the Atlantic hurricane season. FTVLive's piece would be noted by the FCC in their decision against WTLV rendered on May 30, 2017, when it was given a $55,000 fine for carrying the offending Jaguars ad.[130][131]
  • The FCC issued several fines relating to EAS tone usage in August 2019, including ABC being fined $395,000 for using wireless emergency alert tones multiple times during a Jimmy Kimmel Live sketch, AMC Networks being fined $104,000 for using the tones in The Walking Dead episode "Omega", Discovery Inc. being fined $68,000 for including footage of an actual WEA activation during a Lone Star Law episode filmed during Hurricane Harvey, and Meruelo Group was fined $61,000 for including an EAS-like tone during a radio advertisement for KDAY and KDEY-FM's morning show.[125]
  • On September 9, 2019, the FCC proposed a $272,000 fine against CBS for using simulated EAS tones in the Young Sheldon episode, "A Mother, A Child, and a Blue Man's Backside".[132] CBS defended the statement, saying that the tones' usage was a "dramatic portrayal", and that it was an "integral part of the storyline about a family's visceral reaction to a life-threatening emergency". The show's sound editors achieved the effect by downloading EAS tones from YouTube and modifying the volume of the tone. CBS passed the edited tone through three quality rooms equipped with EAS decoders and prescreened the episode to make sure it did not trigger an actual alert. Also, the show's dialogue was used to obscure some elements of the alert. However, the FCC insisted that the modified tone still sounded like a normal EAS tone, despite the volume being lowered and the tone being cut short in duration. It also said that the prescreening process did not excuse an unauthorized usage of the EAS tones.[133]
  • On April 7, 2020, the FCC proposed a $20,000 fine against New York City radio station WNEW-FM, for using the attention signal during its morning show on October 3, 2018 as part of a skit discussing the National Periodic Test held later that day.[134]
  • In January 2023, the FCC proposed a $504,000 fine against Fox Corporation for using EAS tones during a promo broadcast during Fox NFL Sunday in November 2021.[135]

In an opposite move, in 2013 the FCC granted a one-year waiver for a PSA pertaining to the Wireless Emergency Alerts system, with assurance that the tones used in the PSA contained a different set of codes designed not to activate EAS receivers.[136]

Testing errors

  • On October 19, 2008, KWVE-FM in San Clemente, California accidentally initiated a Required Monthly Test when it meant to conduct a Required Weekly Test. Furthermore, an operator aborted the test mid-way through the broadcast (failing to broadcast the end-of-message tone), causing all area outlets to broadcast KWVE-FM's programming until those stations took their equipment offline.[137] On September 15, 2009, the FCC fined the station's owner, Calvary Chapel Costa Mesa, $5,000. After the fine was levied, various state broadcast associations in the United States submitted joint letters to the FCC, protesting against the fine, saying that the commission could have handled the matter better.[138] On November 13, 2009, the FCC rescinded its fine against KWVE-FM, but had still admonished the station for broadcasting an unauthorized RMT, as well as omitting the code to end the test.[139]
  • On November 9, 2011, the first National EAS Test was conducted. Many reported visuals or audio missing, and in the case of DirecTV, Lady Gaga's song "Paparazzi" was heard.[140][141]
  • On September 28, 2016, an emergency alert was broadcast by WKTV in Utica, New York that contained a Hazardous Materials Warning for the entire United States. The message contained a non-sequitur quote from the Dr. Seuss book Green Eggs and Ham, "Would you. Could you. On a train?" WKTV apologized and stated that the alert was "an automated test [from FEMA] which was not intended for public display." A FEMA representative stated that its decoders had been mistakenly "configured to poll a test and development message aggregator instead of or in addition to the production message aggregator", with the test server having used the Green Eggs and Ham quote as placeholder text. The error was also connected to conspiracy theories surrounding a train crash in New Jersey that occurred the next day, which claimed that the alert was a forewarning of the incident.[142]
  • On September 21, 2017, a technical glitch in another scheduled test by KWVE caused the end-of-message tone to be omitted, causing regional participants (particularly Charter and Cox Cable systems in Orange County) to simulcast a portion of Chuck Swindoll's Insight for Living program. Some viewers speculated that the system had been hacked, as the portion of the program relayed (where Swindoll was discussing the Bible verse 2 Timothy 3:1, and stated, "Realize this, extremely violent times will come.") could be insinuated out of context as discussing an impending apocalypse.[143][144][145]
  • On April 20, 2023, Florida residents were awakened between 4:35 and 5:00 AM after a test was sent out to their phones. The government of Florida subsequently apologized for this, stating it was sent by mistake, and that it was meant to be a TV test instead of sending out a notification. Many users spread this through Reddit and Twitter. [146]

See also

References

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External links

  • Consumer facts page
  • FCC notice regarding possible improvements

emergency, alert, system, confused, with, emergency, warning, broadcast, system, emergency, warning, system, emergency, broadcast, system, national, warning, system, united, states, designed, allow, authorized, officials, broadcast, emergency, alerts, warning,. Not to be confused with Emergency Warning Broadcast system Emergency Warning System or Emergency Broadcast System The Emergency Alert System EAS is a national warning system in the United States designed to allow authorized officials to broadcast emergency alerts and warning messages to the public via cable satellite or broadcast television and both AM FM and satellite radio Emergency Alert SystemThe Emergency Alert System logo as of December 3 2007TypeEmergency warning systemCountryUnited StatesTV stationsAll broadcast television stations and cable systemsRadio stations77 designated Primary Entry Point PEP stations All commercial radio stationsBroadcast areaVaries nationwide for national activation limited to 31 counties and equivalents or states at a time for regional activationLaunch dateJanuary 1 1997ReplacedEmergency Broadcast SystemThe EAS became operational on January 1 1997 after being approved by the Federal Communications Commission FCC in November 1994 1 replacing the Emergency Broadcast System EBS Its main improvement over the EBS and perhaps its most distinctive feature is its application of a digitally encoded audio signal known as Specific Area Message Encoding SAME which is responsible for the screeching or chirping sounds at the start and end of each message This signal encodes locations an alert applies to useful for specialized encoding and decoding equipment at broadcasting stations to automatically filter alert messages that do not apply to the area and to relay messages that do Like the EBS the system is primarily designed to allow the President of the United States to address the country via all radio and television stations in the event of a national emergency Despite this neither the system nor its predecessors have been used in this manner The ubiquity of news coverage in these situations such as during the September 11 attacks has been credited to making usage of the system unnecessary or redundant 2 In practice it is used at a regional scale to distribute information regarding imminent threats to public safety such as severe weather situations including flash floods and tornadoes AMBER Alerts and other civil emergencies It is jointly coordinated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency FEMA the Federal Communications Commission FCC and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA The EAS regulations and standards are governed by the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau of the FCC All broadcast television broadcast and satellite radio stations as well as multichannel video programming distributors MVPDs are required to participate in the system The EAS is a front end to the Integrated Public Alert and Warning System IPAWS which coordinates the distribution of alert information via multiple channels including the EAS such as Wireless Emergency Alerts WEA using the Common Alerting Protocol CAP 3 Contents 1 Technical concept 1 1 Primary Entry Point stations 1 2 Communication links 1 3 EAS header 1 4 IPAWS 2 Station requirements 3 System tests 3 1 Nationwide tests 4 Additions and proposals 5 Limitations 6 Incidents 6 1 False alarms 6 2 Cybersecurity breaches 6 3 Tone usage outside of alerts 6 4 Testing errors 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksTechnical concept EditMain article Specific Area Message Encoding Messages in the EAS are composed of four parts a digitally encoded Specific Area Message Encoding SAME header an attention signal an audio announcement and a digitally encoded end of message marker A Sage EAS ENDEC unit The SAME header help info is the most critical part of the EAS design It contains information about who originated the alert the president state or local authorities the National Weather Service NOAA NWS or the broadcaster a short general description of the event tornado flood severe thunderstorm the areas affected up to 32 counties or states the expected duration of the event in minutes the date and time it was issued in UTC and an identification of the originating station There are 77 radio stations designated as National Primary Stations in the Primary Entry Point PEP System to distribute presidential messages to other broadcast stations and cable systems 4 The National Emergency Message formerly known as the Emergency Action Notification is the notice to broadcasters that the president of the United States or their designee will deliver a message over the EAS via the PEP system 5 The government has stated that the system would allow a president to speak during a national emergency within 10 minutes 6 7 List of Primary Entry Point stations 8 Operational area Station CitationsNational NPR PRN SXMUnited States Virgin Islands WSTA 9 Puerto Rico WKAQ 10 Maine WGAN 11 NH VT MA RI WBZ 12 13 14 15 Connecticut WTIC 16 NYC New Jersey WABC 17 Northeast New York WROWSouth Central New York WBNW FM 17 North Central New York WHENWestern New York WHAM 17 Delaware Eastern PA WTEL WHYY FM 18 Western Pennsylvania KDKA 19 West Virginia WCHS 20 Maryland WBAL 21 District of Columbia WFED 22 Eastern Virginia WTARCentral Virginia WRXL 23 Western Virginia WPLYEastern North Carolina WSFL FMCentral North Carolina WQDR FM 24 Western North Carolina WBTSouth Carolina WCOS FM 25 Georgia WMAC WSRV 26 North Florida WOKV 27 Central Florida WFLF 27 South Florida WAQI 27 Alabama WJOX 28 Mississippi WMSI FMEast Tennessee WJCW WJXB FM 29 Middle TN SW Indiana WSM 29 30 West Tennessee WREC 29 Kentucky SW Ohio SE IN WLW 31 32 Northeast Ohio WTAM 32 Michigan WJR 33 NW IN Northern Illinois WLS 30 34 Southern IL Eastern Missouri KMOX 30 35 Wisconsin WTMJ 36 Minnesota WCCO 37 Iowa WHO 38 Western Missouri Kansas WHB 35 Arkansas KAAYSoutheast Louisiana WWL 39 Northwest Louisiana KWKHCentral Texas KLBJ 40 North Texas WBAP KSCS 40 Southeast Texas KTRH 40 West Texas KROD 40 Oklahoma KRMGNebraska KRVN 41 North Dakota KFYR 42 Montana KERR 43 Wyoming KTWO 44 Colorado South Dakota KOA 45 New Mexico KKOBArizona KFLT 46 Utah KSL 47 Idaho KBOINorthern Nevada KKOHSan Diego area KOGO 48 Southern California KFI KNX 48 Central California KMJ 48 Northern California KCBS 48 Hawaii HEMA 49 American Samoa WVUV FMGuam and Northern Marianas KTWGOregon KOPB FM KPNW 50 Washington KIRO 51 Alaska KFQD 52 Primary Entry Point stations Edit The National Public Warning System also known as the Primary Entry Point PEP stations are a network of 77 radio stations that are in coordination with FEMA used to originate emergency alert and warning information to the public before during and after incidents and disasters PEP stations are equipped with additional and backup communications equipment and power generators designed to enable them to continue broadcasting information to the public during and after an event 53 54 55 Beginning with WJR Detroit and WLW Cincinnati in 2016 FEMA began the process of constructing transportable studio shelters at the transmitters of 33 PEP stations which feature broadcasting equipment emergency provisions a rest area and an air filtration system NPWS project manager Manny Centeno explained that these shelters were designed to expand the survivability of these stations to include an all hazards platform which means chemical biological radiological air protection and protection from electromagnetic pulse 53 54 55 Communication links Edit The FEMA National Radio System FNARS Provides Primary Entry Point service to the Emergency Alert System and acts as an emergency presidential link into the EAS The FNARS net control station is located at the Mount Weather Emergency Operations Center 56 Once an EAN is received by an EAS participant from a PEP station or any other participant the message then daisy chains through the network of participants Daisy chains form when one station receives a message from multiple other stations and the station then forwards that message to multiple other stations This process creates many redundant paths through which the message may flow increasing the likelihood that the message will be received by all participants and adding to the survivability of the system Each EAS participant is required to monitor at least two other participants EAS header Edit Because the header lacks error detection codes it is repeated three times for redundancy EAS decoders compare the received headers against one another looking for an exact match between any two eliminating most errors which can cause an activation to fail The decoder then decides whether to ignore the message or to relay it on the air if the message applies to the local area served by the station following parameters set by the broadcaster The SAME header bursts are followed by an attention tone which lasts between 8 and 25 seconds depending on the originating station The tone is 1 050 Hz help info on a NOAA Weather Radio station On commercial broadcast stations a two tone help info attention signal of 853 Hz and 960 Hz sine waves is used instead the same signal used by the older Emergency Broadcast System These tones have become infamous and can be considered both frightening and annoying by viewers in fact the two tones which form approximately the interval of a just major second at an unusually high pitch were chosen specifically for their ability to draw attention due to their unpleasantness on the human ear The SAME header is equally known for its shrillness which many have found to be startling The two tone system is no longer required as of 1998 and is to be used only for audio alerts before EAS messages 57 full citation needed Like the EBS the attention signal is followed by a voice message describing the details of the alert The message ends with 3 bursts of the AFSK EOM or End of Message which is the text NNNN preceded each time by the binary 10101011 calibration IPAWS Edit A Gorman Redlich rack mounted CAP to EAS converter which translates CAP formatted alerts into SAME headers Under a 2006 executive order issued by George W Bush the U S government was instructed to create an effective reliable integrated flexible and comprehensive public warning system This was accomplished via expansions to the aforementioned PEP network and the development of the Integrated Public Alert and Warning System IPAWS a national aggregator and distributor of alert information using the XML based Common Alerting Protocol CAP and an internet network IPAWS can be used to distribute alert information to EAS participants supported mobile phones Wireless Emergency Alerts and other platforms 58 Under an FCC report and order issued in 2007 EAS participants would be required to migrate to digital equipment supporting CAP within 180 days of the specification s adoption by FEMA This officially occurred September 30 2010 but the deadline was later delayed to June 30 2012 at the request of broadcasters 59 The FCC has established that IPAWS is not a full substitute for the existing SAME protocol as it is vulnerable to situations that may make internet connectivity unavailable Therefore broadcasters must convert CAP messages to legacy SAME headers to enable backwards compatibility with the existing daisy chain method of EAS distribution providing a backup distribution path 59 60 In December 2021 the FCC issued a notice of proposed rulemaking seeking to prioritize the display of alert audio and text from CAP messages in order to provide higher quality audio rather than simulcasting the audio off air from a radio station and improve parity between the visual display and alert audio for the benefit of the hard of hearing 61 The rules were enacted in September 2022 62 Station requirements EditThe FCC requires all broadcast stations and multichannel video programming distributors MVPD hereafter EAS participants to install and maintain FCC certified EAS decoders and encoders at their control points or headends These decoders continuously monitor the signals from other nearby broadcast stations for EAS messages For reliability at least two source stations must be monitored one of which must be a designated local primary Participants are to retain the latest version of the EAS handbook EAS participants are required by federal law to relay National Emergency Messages EAN formerly Emergency Action Notification immediately 47 CFR Part 11 54 63 Broadcasters traditionally have been allowed to opt out of relaying other alerts such as severe weather and child abduction emergencies AMBER Alerts if they so choose In practice television stations with local news departments will usually interrupt regularly scheduled programming during newsworthy situations such as severe weather to provide extended coverage 64 If possible EAS participants must transmit the audio 62 and where applicable a visual display containing the extended text from the associated CAP message 59 60 EAS participants are required to keep logs of all received messages Logs may be kept by hand but are usually kept automatically by a small receipt printer in the encoder decoder unit Logs may also be kept electronically inside the unit as long as there is access to an external printer or method to transfer them to a computer System tests EditAll EAS equipment must be tested on a weekly basis The required weekly test RWT consists at a minimum of the header and end of message tones Though an RWT does not need an audio or graphic message announcing the test many stations provide them as a courtesy to the public In addition television stations are not required to transmit a video message for weekly tests RWTs are scheduled by the station on random days and times though quite often during late night or early afternoon hours and are generally not relayed 57 full citation needed A Required Monthly Test RMT transmitted in New Jersey on April 15 2014 as shown on a television set Required monthly tests RMTs are generally originated by the local or state primary station a state emergency management agency or by the National Weather Service and are then relayed by broadcast stations and cable channels RMTs must be performed between 8 30 a m and local sunset during odd numbered months and between local sunset and 8 30 a m during even numbered months Received monthly tests must be retransmitted within 60 minutes of receipt 57 65 Additionally an RMT should not be scheduled or conducted during an event of great importance such as a pre announced presidential speech coverage of a national local election major local or national news coverage outside regularly scheduled newscast hours or a major national sporting event such as the Super Bowl or World Series with other events such as the Indianapolis 500 and Olympic Games mentioned in individual EAS state plans An RWT is not required during a calendar week in which an RMT is scheduled No testing has to be done during a calendar week in which all parts of the EAS header burst attention signal audio message and end of message burst have been legitimately activated In July 2018 in response to the aftermath of the false missile alert in Hawaii earlier in the year which was caused by operator error during an internal drill protocol the FCC announced that it would take steps to promote public awareness and improve efficiency of the system including requiring safeguards to prevent distribution of false alarms the ability to authorize live code tests which would simulate the process and response to an actual emergency and authorizations to use the EAS tones in public service announcements that promote awareness of the system 66 67 Nationwide tests Edit National EAS Test source source track track Audio recording of the first national EAS test on November 9 2011 as heard on WISN TV in Milwaukee and the cable EAS of Charter Communications Wisconsin headend Problems playing this file See media help On February 3 2011 the FCC announced plans and procedures for national EAS tests which involve all television and radio stations connected to the EAS as well as all cable and satellite services in the United States They are not relayed on the NOAA Weather Radio NOAA NWS network as it is an initiation only network and does not receive messages from the PEP network 68 69 The national test would transmit and relay an Emergency Action Notification on November 9 2011 at 2 00 p m EST 70 71 The FCC found that only half of the participants received the message via IPAWS and some failed to receive or retransmit alerts due to erroneous equipment configuration equipment readiness and upkeep issues and confusion regarding EAS rules and technical requirements and that participation among low power broadcasters was low To reduce viewer confusion the FCC stated that future national tests would be delivered under the new event code National Periodic Test NPT and list United States as its location 72 73 A second national test the first classified as an NPT occurred on September 28 2016 as part of National Preparedness Month 74 75 A third national periodic test occurred on September 27 2017 76 The fourth NPT occurred on October 3 2018 delayed from September 20 2018 due to Hurricane Florence It was preceded by the first mandatory wireless emergency alert test 77 78 79 The fifth NPT occurred on August 7 2019 and moved up from past years to prevent it from occurring during the heart of the Atlantic hurricane season The test focused exclusively on distribution to broadcast outlets and television providers via the primary entry point network to gauge the efficiency of alert distribution in the event the internet cannot be used 80 81 The sixth NPT was postponed to 2021 amid the ongoing COVID 19 pandemic out of consideration for the unusual circumstances and working conditions for those in the broadcast and cable industry 82 The sixth test occurred on August 11 2021 at 2 20 PM EDT 83 This test involved the WEA system alongside television and radio As of 2022 as part of a clarification and streamlining of terminology used in messages further NPTs will now be referred to in the test message as a Nationwide Test of the Emergency Alert System issued by the United States Government 84 On May 3 2022 it was announced that the seventh NPT would not take place during 2022 and instead occur in early 2023 85 Additions and proposals EditThe number of event types in the national system has grown to eighty At first all but three of the events civil emergency message immediate evacuation and emergency action notification national emergency were weather related such as a tornado warning Since then several classes of non weather emergencies have been added including in most states the AMBER Alert System for child abduction emergencies In 2016 three additional weather alert codes were authorized for use in relation to hurricane events including Extreme Wind Warning EWW Storm Surge Warning SSW and Storm Surge Watch SSA In 2004 the FCC issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking NPR seeking comment on whether EAS in its present form is the most effective mechanism for warning the American public of an emergency and if not on how EAS can be improved such as mandatory text messages to cellphones regardless of subscription As noted above rules implemented by the FCC on July 12 2007 provisionally endorse incorporating CAP with the SAME protocol In November 2020 Congress passed the Reliable Emergency Alert Distribution Improvement READI Act 86 First sponsored by Hawaii Senator Brian Schatz in response to the Hawaii false missile alert it amends the Warning Alert and Response Network WARN Act to require distribution of wireless alerts issued by the administrator of FEMA and commands the FCC to establish a means of reporting false alerts encourage the establishment of State Emergency Communications Committees SECC that would meet annually to evaluate their EAS plans require the repetition of alerts surrounding emergencies of national significance and open an inquiry into the feasibility of implementing the EAS on internet related services 87 88 89 90 91 92 Limitations EditThe EAS can only be used to relay audio messages that preempt all programming as the intent of an Emergency Action Notification is to serve as a last ditch effort to get a message out if the president cannot get to the media it can easily be made redundant by the immediate and constant coverage that major weather events and other newsworthy situations such as most prominently the September 11 attacks in 2001 receive from television broadcasters and news channels Following the attacks then FCC chairman Michael K Powell cited the ubiquitous media environment as justification for not using the EAS in their immediate aftermath Glenn Collins of The New York Times acknowledged these limitations noting that no president has ever used the current EAS system or its technical predecessors in the last 50 years despite the Soviet missile crisis a presidential assassination the Oklahoma City bombing major earthquakes and three recent high alert terrorist warnings and that using it would have actually hindered the availability of live coverage from media outlets 2 93 Following the tornado outbreak of March 3 2019 Birmingham Alabama NWS meteorologist Kevin Laws told CNN that he personally wished that alerts could be updated in real time in order to reflect the unpredictable nature of weather events noting that the storm system s unexpected change in trajectory towards Lee County resulted in only a nine minute warning the resulting tornado would kill 23 people 87 The trend of cord cutting has led to concerns that viewers lessened use of broadcast media in favor of streaming video services would inhibit their ability to receive emergency information notwithstanding availability of alerts on mobile phones 87 88 The READI Act called for an inquiry into the distribution of alerts via internet platforms 87 Incidents EditFalse alarms Edit On February 1 2005 in Connecticut an alert was mistakenly issued calling for the immediate evacuation of the entire state The alert contained no specific detail on why it had been issued The message was broadcast due to operator error while conducting an unannounced but scheduled statewide test A study conducted following the incident reported that at least 11 of residents actually saw the warning live and that 63 of those surveyed were a little or not at all concerned citing a suspicious lack of detail in the message which a legitimate alert would include Only 1 of those surveyed actually attempted to leave the state Connecticut State Police did not receive any calls related to the incident 94 95 96 On June 26 2007 at 7 35 a m CDT an Emergency Action Notification was accidentally issued in Illinois when a new satellite receiver at the state s EOC was accidentally connected to a live system before final internal testing of the new delivery path had been completed The alert was followed by dead air and then audio from designated station 720 WGN in Chicago being simulcast across almost every television and radio station in the Chicago area and throughout much of Illinois A confused Spike O Dell host of the station s morning show at the time was heard on air wondering what that beeping was all about 97 98 On May 19 2010 NOAA Weather Radio and CSEPP tone alert radios in the Hermiston Oregon area near the Umatilla Chemical Depot were activated with an EAS alert shortly after 5 p m The message transmitted was for a severe thunderstorm warning issued by the National Weather Service in Pendleton but the transmission broadcast instead was a long period of silence followed by a few words in Spanish Umatilla County Emergency Management has stressed there was no emergency at the depot 99 On September 3 2016 in the wake of Tropical Storm Hermine an alert was displayed on television calling for the immediate evacuation of the entirety of Suffolk County abruptly ending with the incomplete sentence This is an emergency message from About 15 minutes after the original message was sent the alert was re issued with an addendum clarifying that the alert was actually calling for a voluntary evacuation of Fire Island a barrier island of Long Island Officials cited an error in the county s Code Red system while the correct message was entered into the system an error processing an abbreviated message for television resulted in the error 100 101 On May 23 2017 at around 8 55 p m EDT a Nuclear Power Plant Warning was issued for the Hope Creek and Salem Nuclear Power Plants The alert was issued for Salem and Cumberland counties in New Jersey In a statement by the New Jersey State Police it was a test message intended for a small group of emergency management personnel who were participating in the test Due to a coding error the message was publicly broadcast This would happen again in July 2022 102 On August 15 2017 at approximately 12 25 a m ChST Guam stations KTWG and KSTO transmitted a civil danger warning for the island Guam Homeland Security described the message which interrupted programming on the stations and was received on television by some viewers as being an unauthorized test of the EAS The incident s impact was strengthened as North Korea had threatened the launch of ballistic missiles towards Guam only a few days beforehand Numerous calls to 911 operators and the Department of Homeland Security were made following the broadcast 103 104 On January 13 2018 a false alarm was issued warning of a missile threat to Hawaii On January 13 2018 at approximately 8 07 a m HST the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency HI EMA mistakenly issued an emergency alert warning of a ballistic missile inbound threatening the region which was claimed to be not a drill 38 minutes later it was announced by HI EMA and the Honolulu Police Department that the alert was a false alarm 105 106 The incident came amidst heightened concern over the possibility that Hawaii could be targeted by North Korean missiles in December 2017 Hawaii tested its missile sirens for the first time since the Cold War 107 HI EMA administrator Vern Miyagi stated that the incident was a mistake made during a standard procedure at the change over of a shift 108 On August 31 2022 amid wildfires an immediate evacuation notice was mistakenly issued by the Los Angeles County Office of Emergency Management for Los Angeles the Eastern North Pacific Ocean and Port Conception to Guadalupe the alert text repeatedly listed Eastern North Pacific Ocean or Eastern North Pacific twelve different times The Ventura County Sheriff s Office stated that the alert had been issued in error 109 110 Cybersecurity breaches Edit EAS equipment has been the subject of various cyberattacks caused primarily by participants using insecure or factory default passwords on their encoders and decoders and outdated software containing unpatched vulnerabilities On multiple occasions federal government departments have warned that failure to employ secure passwords and keep software updated made EAS equipment vulnerable to such attacks which could result in disruptions such as false alerts 111 112 113 114 In February 2013 the EAS equipment of several stations in Great Falls Montana and Marquette Michigan were breached to play a false alert allegedly warning of a zombie apocalypse using the lines Civil authorities in your area have reported that the bodies of the dead are rising from the graves and attacking the living from the Anthrax song Fight Em Til You Can t It was identified that the attack had come from an overseas source Furthermore the broadcasters had neglected to change the factory default logins or passwords on their equipment Because of this the FCC FEMA equipment manufacturers as well as trade groups including the Michigan Association of Broadcasters urged broadcasters to change their passwords and to recheck their security measures 115 116 117 112 113 In a related incident WIZM FM in La Crosse Wisconsin accidentally triggered the EAS on television station WKBT DT by airing a recording of the false message during its morning show The relayed audio included the hosts reactions and laughter to the clip 118 On February 28 2017 WZZY in Winchester Indiana was hacked in a nearly identical manner playing the same dead bodies audio from the February 2013 incidents The incident prompted a public response from the Randolph County Sheriff s Department clarifying that there was no actual emergency 119 120 In January 2020 Security Ledger published an investigation finding that at least 50 EAS decoders by Digital Alert Systems had not been patched for a security vulnerability use of a shared SSH key found by IOActive in 2013 114 On February 20 2020 the EAS equipment of Washington based provider Wave Broadband was hacked causing approximately 3 000 customers in Jefferson County to receive several false alerts including a Radiological Hazard Warning which contained irrelevant messages including one suggesting that the provider change its passwords and alert audio referencing internet memes and websites 121 122 On March 2 and 3 2020 a legitimate Required Monthly Test was displayed with a message AIGHT IM DONE U CAN REST NOW MR GERDE WAS HERE that had also appeared in the hack a company official stated that this was a remnant of the attack that had not yet been removed 123 124 Tone usage outside of alerts Edit To protect the integrity of the system and prevent false activations the FCC prohibits the use of actual or simulated EAS WEA tones and attention signals outside of genuine alerts tests or authorized public service announcements especially when they are used to capture audience attention during advertisements dramatic entertainment and educational programs even if the footage is documentation of an event where an actual alert was issued 125 Broadcasters who misuse the tones may be sanctioned including being required to partake in compliance measures and fined 125 Tones from the EAS were used in the trailer for the 2013 film Olympus Has Fallen cable providers were fined 1 9 million by the Federal Communications Commission FCC on March 3 2014 for misuse of EAS tones 126 An event similar to this previously occurred in November 2013 when TBS was fined 25 000 for the use of EAS tones in a Conan advertisement 127 During the October 24 2014 episode of the syndicated radio show The Bobby Bones Show host Bobby Bones played audio from the 2011 national test as part of a rant about a genuine test from Nashville s Fox affiliate WZTV that interrupted Game 2 of the 2014 World Series on October 22 The errant Emergency Action Notification was relayed to some broadcasters and cable systems particularly those not configured to reject EAN messages that did not match the current date On May 19 2015 iHeartMedia who distributes the show and owns its flagship station WSIX FM was fined 1 million for the incident The company was also ordered to implement a three year compliance plan to avoid any further incidents including removing all EAS tones or similar sounding noises from its audio production libraries 128 129 From August 4 to 6 2016 Tegna Inc owned NBC affiliate WTLV in Jacksonville Florida aired an ad several times during NBC s primetime coverage of the 2016 Summer Olympics produced by the marketing department of the National Football League s Jacksonville Jaguars featuring out of sequence EAS tones over Jaguars training camp footage and a voiceover noting this is not a test this is an emergency broadcast transmission seek shelter immediately along with the on screen text the storm is coming The ad aired four times before station compliance authorities pulled the advertisement after the local news industry blog FTVLive criticized the station for carrying it especially during the peak of the Atlantic hurricane season FTVLive s piece would be noted by the FCC in their decision against WTLV rendered on May 30 2017 when it was given a 55 000 fine for carrying the offending Jaguars ad 130 131 The FCC issued several fines relating to EAS tone usage in August 2019 including ABC being fined 395 000 for using wireless emergency alert tones multiple times during a Jimmy Kimmel Live sketch AMC Networks being fined 104 000 for using the tones in The Walking Dead episode Omega Discovery Inc being fined 68 000 for including footage of an actual WEA activation during a Lone Star Law episode filmed during Hurricane Harvey and Meruelo Group was fined 61 000 for including an EAS like tone during a radio advertisement for KDAY and KDEY FM s morning show 125 On September 9 2019 the FCC proposed a 272 000 fine against CBS for using simulated EAS tones in the Young Sheldon episode A Mother A Child and a Blue Man s Backside 132 CBS defended the statement saying that the tones usage was a dramatic portrayal and that it was an integral part of the storyline about a family s visceral reaction to a life threatening emergency The show s sound editors achieved the effect by downloading EAS tones from YouTube and modifying the volume of the tone CBS passed the edited tone through three quality rooms equipped with EAS decoders and prescreened the episode to make sure it did not trigger an actual alert Also the show s dialogue was used to obscure some elements of the alert However the FCC insisted that the modified tone still sounded like a normal EAS tone despite the volume being lowered and the tone being cut short in duration It also said that the prescreening process did not excuse an unauthorized usage of the EAS tones 133 On April 7 2020 the FCC proposed a 20 000 fine against New York City radio station WNEW FM for using the attention signal during its morning show on October 3 2018 as part of a skit discussing the National Periodic Test held later that day 134 In January 2023 the FCC proposed a 504 000 fine against Fox Corporation for using EAS tones during a promo broadcast during Fox NFL Sunday in November 2021 135 In an opposite move in 2013 the FCC granted a one year waiver for a PSA pertaining to the Wireless Emergency Alerts system with assurance that the tones used in the PSA contained a different set of codes designed not to activate EAS receivers 136 Testing errors Edit On October 19 2008 KWVE FM in San Clemente California accidentally initiated a Required Monthly Test when it meant to conduct a Required Weekly Test Furthermore an operator aborted the test mid way through the broadcast failing to broadcast the end of message tone causing all area outlets to broadcast KWVE FM s programming until those stations took their equipment offline 137 On September 15 2009 the FCC fined the station s owner Calvary Chapel Costa Mesa 5 000 After the fine was levied various state broadcast associations in the United States submitted joint letters to the FCC protesting against the fine saying that the commission could have handled the matter better 138 On November 13 2009 the FCC rescinded its fine against KWVE FM but had still admonished the station for broadcasting an unauthorized RMT as well as omitting the code to end the test 139 On November 9 2011 the first National EAS Test was conducted Many reported visuals or audio missing and in the case of DirecTV Lady Gaga s song Paparazzi was heard 140 141 On September 28 2016 an emergency alert was broadcast by WKTV in Utica New York that contained a Hazardous Materials Warning for the entire United States The message contained a non sequitur quote from the Dr Seuss book Green Eggs and Ham Would you Could you On a train WKTV apologized and stated that the alert was an automated test from FEMA which was not intended for public display A FEMA representative stated that its decoders had been mistakenly configured to poll a test and development message aggregator instead of or in addition to the production message aggregator with the test server having used the Green Eggs and Ham quote as placeholder text The error was also connected to conspiracy theories surrounding a train crash in New Jersey that occurred the next day which claimed that the alert was a forewarning of the incident 142 On September 21 2017 a technical glitch in another scheduled test by KWVE caused the end of message tone to be omitted causing regional participants particularly Charter and Cox Cable systems in Orange County to simulcast a portion of Chuck Swindoll s Insight for Living program Some viewers speculated that the system had been hacked as the portion of the program relayed where Swindoll was discussing the Bible verse 2 Timothy 3 1 and stated Realize this extremely violent times will come could be insinuated out of context as discussing an impending apocalypse 143 144 145 On April 20 2023 Florida residents were awakened between 4 35 and 5 00 AM after a test was sent out to their phones The government of Florida subsequently apologized for this stating it was sent by mistake and that it was meant to be a TV test instead of sending out a notification Many users spread this through Reddit and Twitter 146 See also Edit 1990s portalAlert Ready Canada Cell Broadcast Digital Emergency Alert System DEAS Earthquake Early Warning Japan Emergency population warning Emergency Public Warning System Flash Flood Guidance Systems HANDEL UK s former National Attack Warning System ICANN s TEAC Transfer Emergency Action Contact channel in cases of URL hijacking J Alert Japan Local Access Alert Mexican Seismic Alert System Mexico s Earthquake Early Warning System which also employs Specific Area Message Encoding technology National Severe Weather Warning Service National Warning System NOAA Weather Radio Nuclear football Nuclear MASINT Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service ShakeAlert Specific Area Message Encoding Standard Emergency Warning Signal Australia Wartime Broadcasting Service Weatheradio Canada Wireless Emergency Alerts WEA References Edit What is Conelrad EBS EAS Archived from the original on April 5 2015 Retrieved April 14 2015 a b Collins Glenn December 21 2001 The Silence of the Alert System Experts Urge Overhaul of Plan Unused Even on Sept 11 The New York Times Archived from the original on November 21 2016 Retrieved February 19 2017 Integrated Public Alert amp Warning System fema gov Federal Emergency Management Agency September 18 2018 Retrieved September 22 2018 IPAWS provides public safety officials with an effective way to alert and warn the public about serious emergencies using the Emergency Alert System EAS Wireless Emergency Alerts WEA the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA Weather Radio and other public alerting systems from a single interface The National Public Warning System FEMA gov May 12 2017 Retrieved June 16 2017 Emergency Alert System 2001 AM amp FM Handbook Emergency Alert System 2001 AM amp FM Handbook United States United States Federal Communications Commission 2001 p 4 Emergency broadcasts can be hacked US researchers say BBC News July 9 2013 Archived from the original on December 22 2018 Retrieved July 21 2018 Hello This Is Your President Radio World February 2 2010 Archived from the original on July 31 2019 Retrieved July 31 2019 https www fema gov sites default files 2020 07 fema incident annex power outage pdf bare URL PDF http www vitema vi gov docs default source annual reports 2011 annual report pdf bare URL PDF https www fcc gov file 13186 download bare URL https www mab org wp content uploads 2021 10 Maine EAS State Plan 2017 FCCapproval pdf bare URL PDF https www fcc gov file 13891 download bare URL PDF https www fcc gov file 13888 download bare URL PDF https vabnow files wordpress com 2017 08 vermont eas state plan as approved 8 25 17 pdf bare URL PDF https www fcc gov file 13632 download bare URL PDF https portal ct gov media DEMHS docs Plans and Publications EHSP0048 EASPlan2014 pdf bare URL PDF a b c https nysbroadcasters org wp content uploads 2017 03 NYSBA EAS Plan August 20162 pdf bare URL PDF https www fcc gov file 12956 download bare URL EAS Summit and PEP stations Radio amp Television Business Report February 24 2014 https www fcc gov file 13914 download bare URL PDF https mdem maryland gov Documents md eas master plan pdf bare URL PDF SBE Chapter 37 Prior Meetings Page AM Revitalization WFED 1500 AM Transmitter https www fcc gov file 13913 download bare URL PDF https files nc gov ncdps div EM Documents StateEASPlanAugust2011 pdf bare URL PDF EAS PLAN Jan 2004 rev 06 30 19 PDF PDF https gema georgia gov document document 201609sepeaschangespdf download bare URL PDF a b c http fab org wp content uploads 2019 08 State of Florida EAS Plan Revised with CFR 08142019 pdf bare URL PDF https al ba com wp2 wp content uploads 2017 05 Alabama EAS Monitoring Assignments pdf bare URL PDF a b c https tabtn org wp content uploads easPlanTN pdf bare URL PDF a b c https www indianabroadcasters org app uploads 2016 03 Indiana EAS Plan May 2018 1 pdf bare URL PDF https www fcc gov file 13887 download bare URL PDF a b https www fcc gov file 15530 download bare URL PDF https www fcc gov file 12842 download bare URL https ilba org wp content uploads 2020 12 IL EAS State EAS Plan June 2019 Final pdf bare URL PDF a b https sbe55 org wp content uploads 2021 05 mo eas plan pdf bare URL PDF https www sbe24 org EAS MAIN0120 pdf bare URL PDF https dps mn gov divisions ecn Documents eas mnplan 2019 pdf bare URL PDF https www legis iowa gov docs publications SD 1129236 pdf bare URL PDF https broadcasters org wp content uploads 2020 07 LA eas plan pdf bare URL PDF a b c d https www tab org public upload files misc LATEST VERSION eas texasplan 7 2 2021 pdf bare URL PDF https ne eas org wp content uploads 2020 10 2020 State EAS Plan 4 1 20 pdf bare URL PDF https www ndba org files wp content uploads 2021 08 EAS State Warning Plan 2018 pdf bare URL PDF https des mt gov Response EAS MT EAS Plan Final 8Feb2018 pdf bare URL PDF https www fcc gov file 13915 download bare URL PDF https sdba org wp content uploads 2015 10 Approved EAS Plan by FCC Dec 2016 State Final Rev 102518 pdf bare URL PDF https www fcc gov file 13897 download bare URL PDF http img ksl com slc 2544 254498 25449878 doc bare URL DOX DOCX file a b c d https www caloes ca gov WarningCenterSite Documents StateofCaliforniaEAS Plan pdf bare URL PDF https dod hawaii gov hiema files 2016 03 2003 EAS plan with Change 2 pdf bare URL PDF http www sbe76 org Oregon 20State 20EAS 20Plan 202021 docx bare URL DOX DOCX file https mil wa gov asset 5fb594e600ab9 Archived October 22 2021 at the Wayback Machine https www fcc gov file 13895 download bare URL PDF a b WLW PEP Station to Test New Studio Shelter Radio World October 22 2018 Archived from the original on April 1 2019 Retrieved July 30 2019 a b FEMA Upgrading WLW Radio Ink October 22 2018 Archived from the original on July 30 2019 Retrieved July 30 2019 a b In Hardening EAS Lynchpins FEMA Puts Confidence In Radio Insideradio com Archived from the original on July 29 2019 Retrieved July 30 2019 Merlin Ross Z 2004 Communications Systems for Public Health Contingencies PDF DHS FEMA Wireless Program Management Team Archived from the original PDF on June 25 2008 a b c United States Code of Federal Regulations 47 CFR 11 61 Tests of EAS procedures PDF access gpo gov Archived PDF from the original on July 26 2014 Retrieved July 19 2014 The Impact of IPAWS on Public Alerts and Warnings www govtech com January 17 2011 Archived from the original on August 24 2019 Retrieved August 24 2019 a b c Oxenford Davis Wright Tremaine LLP David D Tol Jennifer Frewer February 10 2012 FCC revises emergency alert system rules reminds participants of June 30 2012 CAP compliance deadline Lexology Retrieved August 24 2019 a b FEMA Adopts Digital Message Format for EAS CAP Standard Triggering 180 Day Clock for Compliance Broadcast Law Blog September 30 2010 Archived from the original on August 24 2019 Retrieved August 24 2019 FCC Seeks to Improve Accessibility amp Clarity of Emergency Alerts Federal Communications Commission December 15 2021 Retrieved September 30 2022 a b Winslow George September 29 2022 FCC Updates Emergency Alert Rules TVTechnology Retrieved September 30 2022 Electronic Code of Federal Regulations National Archives Archived from the original on May 29 2012 Retrieved July 6 2012 Ohio Weatherman Fires Back at Bachelorette Fans After Tornado Warning Interrupts Broadcast The Hollywood Reporter May 28 2019 Archived from the original on October 14 2019 Retrieved October 14 2019 State EAS Plans and Chairs Federal Communications Commission Archived from the original on April 16 2014 Retrieved April 15 2014 The FCC is changing up the country s emergency alert system to prevent another Hawaii incident The Verge Archived from the original on July 13 2018 Retrieved July 13 2018 FCC PROMOTES EMERGENCY ALERT RELIABILITY PDF FCC July 12 2018 Retrieved July 13 2018 FCC Press Release FCC Action Paves Way for First Ever Presidential Alert to be Aired Across U S on Nation s Emergency Alert System PDF fcc gov FCC February 3 2011 Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2011 FCC Third Report and Order In the Matter of Review of the Emergency Alert System PDF fcc gov FCC February 3 2011 Archived from the original PDF on February 10 2011 FEMA FCC Announce Nationwide Test Of The Emergency Alert System Press release FEMA June 9 2011 Archived from the original on June 14 2011 Clayton Mark November 9 2011 Emergency Alert System Why US is doing first national test now Christian Science Monitor Archived from the original on December 14 2011 Retrieved December 15 2011 September 28 2016 Nationwide EAS Test Federal Communications Commission April 21 2017 Retrieved June 27 2017 The 2016 National EAS Test Will Be Different Govtech Archived from the original on July 18 2018 Retrieved September 27 2017 Nationwide Emergency Alert System Test Planned for September 27 FEMA gov www fema gov Archived from the original on October 1 2016 Retrieved September 30 2016 Nationwide Emergency Alert System Test Planned for September 28 Federal Communications Commission September 26 2016 Archived from the original on September 30 2016 Retrieved September 27 2016 Nationwide Emergency Alert System Test Planned for September 27 PDF Federal Communications Commission July 14 2016 Archived PDF from the original on September 16 2017 Retrieved July 17 2017 Mark Your Calendars Next EAS Test Date Affirmed Radio amp Television Business Report July 23 2018 Archived from the original on July 25 2018 Retrieved August 1 2018 Stracqualursi Veronica Presidential Alert Trump text slides to October 3 CNN Archived from the original on September 18 2018 Retrieved September 18 2018 Emergency alert test sounds off on mobile phones nationwide Archived from the original on October 3 2018 Retrieved October 3 2018 Ashworth Susan May 29 2019 Next Nationwide Emergency Test Set for August 2019 TV TTechnology Archived from the original on July 29 2019 Retrieved July 29 2019 FEMA Sets August For 2019 National EAS Test With Focus On PEP Stations Insideradio com Archived from the original on July 29 2019 Retrieved July 29 2019 No National Test this Year for FEMA s Integrated Public Alert amp Warning System FEMA Retrieved July 26 2020 FEMA and FCC Plan Nationwide Emergency Alert Test for Aug 11 Test Messages Will be Sent to TVs and Radios Along with Select Cell Phones That Have Opted in to Receive Test Messages FEMA gov June 11 2021 Retrieved August 6 2022 FCC updates new Emergency Alert System rules to improve more message clarification Radioinsight com October 2 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 FEMA Says No National EAS Test is Planned for This Year Insideradio com Balderston Michael November 18 2020 House Approves Bill Bringing EAS to Streaming TVTechnology Retrieved March 11 2021 a b c d Wattles Jackie March 8 2019 Should Netflix and Hulu give you emergency alerts CNN Archived from the original on April 28 2019 Retrieved April 28 2019 a b Senate Approves READI Act To Inform Public In Emergencies All Access Archived from the original on April 28 2019 Retrieved April 28 2019 Ashworth Susan July 23 2018 Sens Schatz Thune Introduce READI Act to Improve EAS TvTechnology Archived from the original on April 28 2019 Retrieved April 28 2019 New Law Would Put EAS Alerts On Repeat Insideradio com Archived from the original on April 28 2019 Retrieved April 28 2019 McNerney Jerry November 18 2020 Text H R 6096 116th Congress 2019 2020 READI Act www congress gov Retrieved March 11 2021 House Passes Emergency Alert Focused READI Act Radio amp Television Business Report November 17 2020 Retrieved March 11 2021 Stine Randy J September 26 2001 Terrorism Attacks Cue EAS Debate Radio World IMAS Publishing USA Inc Archived from the original on October 24 2001 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Pazinokas Mark February 2 2005 Connecticut Evacuation False Alarm Hartford Courant Archived from the original on February 15 2017 Retrieved February 15 2017 Public Reaction to the Erroneous Statewide Broadcast of February 1st 2005 PDF George Washington University Center for Survey Research and Analysis Archived PDF from the original on June 14 2010 Retrieved February 15 2017 False Alarm Connecticut Not Being Evacuated WestportNow com February 1 2005 Archived from the original on April 2 2019 Retrieved June 5 2020 State police said they received no calls related to the erroneous alert Emergency Alert System Activated By Mistake cbs2chicago com Archived from the original on August 6 2008 Inadvertent Activation of the Illinois Emergency Alert System FEMA June 28 2007 Archived from the original on July 17 2007 Glitch scrambles Oregon thunderstorm warning The Herald Everett Washington Associated Press May 20 2010 Archived from the original on July 12 2010 Retrieved June 1 2010 Evacuation Alert for Suffolk County Mistakenly Given NBC New York Archived from the original on November 28 2018 Retrieved November 27 2018 Officials Automated system caused false alert for Hermine Newsday Archived from the original on January 29 2020 Retrieved January 29 2020 Hall Gray May 24 2017 False nuclear power plant warning worried NJ residents ABC Retrieved March 25 2023 Criss Doug Guam radio stations freak out island with emergency alert CNN Archived from the original on September 21 2017 Retrieved January 14 2018 Haas Benjamin August 15 2017 Guam radio stations accidentally air emergency alert amid North Korea threat The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Archived from the original on January 15 2018 Retrieved January 14 2018 Emergency officials mistakenly send out missile threat alert Honolulu Star Advertiser January 13 2018 Archived from the original on January 13 2018 Retrieved January 13 2018 Hawaii missile alert False alarm warns residents of ballistic missile threat Archived from the original on January 13 2018 Retrieved November 27 2018 Hawaii sends out missile alert by mistake BBC News 2018 Archived from the original on July 24 2018 Retrieved January 13 2018 Darrah Nicole Joyce Kathleen January 13 2018 Hawaii s scary false missile threat Worker s push of the wrong button to blame Fox News Archived from the original on January 14 2018 Retrieved January 13 2018 Ladden Hall Dan September 1 2022 Los Angeles Evacuation Order Broadcast on TV in Error The Daily Beast Retrieved September 6 2022 Evacuation notice broadcast countywide made in error Santa Clarita Valley Signal September 1 2022 Retrieved September 6 2022 Goodin Dan August 5 2022 Huge flaw threatens US emergency alert system DHS researcher warns Ars Technica Retrieved August 6 2022 a b Zombie hack blamed on easy passwords chicagotribune com Reuters Archived from the original on August 8 2019 Retrieved August 8 2019 a b Memmott Mark February 12 2013 Zombie Alert Also Aired In Michigan Hacking Traced To Overseas Source NPR org Archived from the original on August 8 2019 Retrieved August 8 2019 a b Seven Years Later Scores of EAS Systems sit Un patched Vulnerable The Security Ledger January 27 2020 Archived from the original on January 29 2020 Retrieved January 29 2020 Zombie apocalypse now Michigan TV stations Emergency Alert Systems hacked with notice of walking dead Mlive com February 12 2013 Archived from the original on February 14 2013 Retrieved February 12 2013 WZZY Hacked Broadcasts Zombie Warning in Indiana Radio World March 3 2017 Archived from the original on August 8 2019 Retrieved August 8 2019 Police say Mont TV zombie hoax likely linked to others USA Today Archived from the original on August 8 2019 Retrieved August 8 2019 Hubbuch Chris TV zombie attack warning a false alarm La Crosse Tribune Archived from the original on August 8 2019 Retrieved August 8 2019 Hackers take over Randolph County radio station s alert system send out messages about fake zombie attack Fox59 com March 1 2017 Archived from the original on March 8 2017 Retrieved March 9 2017 O Keefe PJ March 3 2017 WZZY 98 3FM zombie outbreak Hacked radio station reports zombie attack in Randolph County Indiana WCPO com Archived from the original on March 9 2017 Retrieved March 9 2017 Wave cable meme hack affects 3 000 Jefferson County residents Port Townsend Leader Archived from the original on April 6 2020 Retrieved April 6 2020 Johnson Graham February 22 2020 Hackers target cable TV alert system and send false messages KIRO Retrieved July 26 2020 Wave false alert remains mystery after residual message airs again Port Townsend Leader Archived from the original on April 6 2020 Retrieved April 6 2020 False TV alert over radiological hazard concerns Washington emergency officials KING5 com February 21 2020 Archived from the original on March 27 2020 Retrieved April 6 2020 a b c Pedersen Erik August 16 2019 Walking Dead Jimmy Kimmel Live amp Others Hit With FCC Fines For Misusing Emergency Alert Tones Deadline Archived from the original on August 16 2019 Retrieved August 16 2019 False alarm Olympus movie ad draws 1 9M fine The Big Story Archived from the original on December 31 2014 Welch Chris November 6 2013 FCC fines TBS 25 000 for simulating emergency alert tones in Conan ad The Verge Archived from the original on December 14 2017 Retrieved August 17 2019 Brodkin Jon May 19 2015 Multi state cascade of false emergency alerts nets 1 million fine Ars Technica Archived from the original on May 29 2019 Retrieved May 29 2019 Fybush Scott October 28 2014 NERW Extra A Few Words About EAS Fybush Media Archived from the original on October 30 2014 Retrieved October 30 2014 Dixon Drew May 30 2017 Jacksonville s WTLV TV 12 owner fined for use of Emergency Alert tones in Jaguars promo The Florida Times Union Archived from the original on June 6 2017 Retrieved June 7 2017 In the Matter of TEGNA Inc parent of Multimedia Holdings Corporation Licensee of Station WTLV Jacksonville Florida PDF Press release Federal Communications Commission May 30 2017 Archived PDF from the original on July 8 2017 Retrieved June 7 2017 Pedersen Erik September 9 2019 Young Sheldon FCC Proposes Six Figure Fine For Misuse Of Emergency Alert Tone Deadline Hollywood Retrieved May 13 2021 CBS Fined 272 000 After FCC Concludes It Misused EAS Tones Inside Radio September 10 2019 Retrieved May 12 2021 FCC Proposes 20 000 Fine Against WNEW For Using EAS Tones RadioInsight April 7 2020 Archived from the original on April 8 2020 Retrieved April 8 2020 Tom Butts January 25 2023 FCC Proposes 504K Fine on Fox for EAS Violations TVTechnology Retrieved February 7 2023 Stimson Leslie June 3 2013 ABA Tells Members It s Okay to Air New WEA PSAs TV Tech Retrieved April 28 2023 In the Matter of Calvary Chapel of Costa Mesa Inc FM Radio Station KWVE San Clemente California Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture Adopted September 15 2009 Released September 17 2009 PDF Federal Communications Commission December 6 2016 Retrieved June 16 2017 State Broadcast Associations Appeal KWVE EAS Fine to FCC Radio October 9 2009 Archived from the original on June 2 2011 Retrieved October 2 2010 FCC Dismisses KWVE EAS Fine Radio Magazine November 17 2009 Archived from the original on July 15 2011 Retrieved October 2 2010 Directv emergency alert test Lady gaga 11 9 11 retrieved October 31 2022 Did the national Emergency Alert System mistakenly play Lady Gaga Christian Science Monitor November 9 2011 ISSN 0882 7729 Retrieved October 31 2022 New York Television Station Broadcasts Bizarre Warning Before Hoboken Train Crash Snopes com October 3 2016 Retrieved July 14 2022 End of world prediction interrupts TV broadcasts in Orange County Orange County Register September 21 2017 Archived from the original on September 29 2017 Retrieved September 30 2017 End of world message on TV was just glitch from a test of the Emergency Alert System Orange County Register September 23 2017 Archived from the original on September 30 2017 Retrieved September 30 2017 Bever Lindsey September 22 2017 Extremely violent times will come Ominous emergency alert was just a TV test gone awry Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on September 30 2017 Retrieved September 30 2017 NWS strongly discourages deactivating emergency alerts after 4AM test sent in error ABC Action News Tampa Bay WFTS April 20 2023 Retrieved April 20 2023 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Emergency Alert System Consumer facts page FCC notice regarding possible improvements Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emergency Alert System amp oldid 1157161346, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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