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The Public Warning Process
Warning Basics
nThe event must be detected.
nThe decision to warn the public must be made.
nThe public must receive and understand the warning.
nThe public must have somewhere safe to go to or action to take
nThe public must act.
Unless we improve the outcome of an event, the system has failed Public Warning is a process, not a technology. But too often, government officials begin with a technology solution. Public Warning without a corresponding public action is a failure. If we continue to base our ability to warn the public during a crisis by only developing technological solutions, we are doom to fail. Why?, because without an understanding of how to change human behavior during that crisis, the outcomes may fall short of the goal of saving lives and reducing the impact of the event. It can not be stated too forcibly that a public warning issued without a proper public response is still a failure. |
National Warning Systems
EAS - Emergency Alerting system
NOAA Weather Radio
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What is CAP?
Common Alerting Protocol (CAP) is a
simple but general format for exchanging all-hazard emergency alerts and
public warnings over all kinds of networks. CAP allows a consistent
warning message to be disseminated simultaneously over many different
warning systems, thus increasing warning effectiveness while simplifying
the warning task. CAP also facilitates the detection of emerging
patterns in local warnings of various kinds, such as might indicate an
undetected hazard or hostile act. CAP provides a template for effective
warning messages based on best practices identified in academic research
and real-world experience.
The Board of Trustees of the Partnership for Public Warning has announced that the Partnership has been dissolved. The Board wishes to express its thanks to all the organizations and individuals who worked with the Partnership to improve America’s public warning capability.
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