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A nationwide alert system will
be put in place for mobile phones, enabling the Federal Communications
Commission to send text messages in emergency situations to people’s cell
phones as part of the plan approved by federal regulators on Wednesday. The need
of putting in place an emergency alert system by using text messages should
prove useful considering the increasing popularity of text messaging, FCC said.
Chairman Kevin J. Martin said
upon the announcement that the more the public relies on wireless
communication, the more important it is to be able to share critical information
in times of crisis. A Commercial Mobile Alert System should prove effective for
ensuring public safety and welfare throughout the US.
“The ability to deliver accurate
and timely warnings and alerts through cell phones and other mobile devices is
an important next step in our efforts to help ensure that the American public
has the information they need to take action to protect themselves and their
families prior to, and during, disasters and other emergencies,” said Martin in
a prepared statement.
The plan was created in
compliance with the Warning, Alert and Response Network Act (WARN Act) of 2006,
and was based on the recommendations of the Commercial Mobile Service Alert
Advisory Committee (CMSAAC) for the transmission of emergency messages to the
public.
“By adopting technical
requirements for the wireless alerting system today, we are enabling wireless
providers that choose to participate in this system to begin designing their
networks to deliver mobile alerts, said Martin, adding that “this system has
the potential to significantly impact the way Americans receive critical
warnings on the go, whether they are at home, work or vacationing.”
The text messages will include
presidential alerts, imminent threat alerts and child abduction emergency/AMBER
alerts, federal regulators said. Wireless carriers that choose to participate
in the program will send text messages at first, but things might evolve and
include video and audio services in case of emergency (that depends of
course on the technological advance).
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