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EAS Handbook Must Be at Duty Stations for Nov. 9 Nationwide Test
10/26/2011
WASHINGTON: Broadcasters and cable operators participating
in the Nov. 9 nationwide test of the Emergency Alert System are required to
have a specific document on hand during the event. The Federal Communications
Commission has posted its EAS Handbook for the test, with the following
directive:
“A copy of the handbook must be located at normal duty positions or EAS
equipment locations where an operator is required to be on duty and must immediately
be made available to staff responsible for participating in the test.”
This latest EAS handbook supersedes all previously released versions. It is
available in .pdf form
here.
The FCC notes that while state and local EAS tests are conducted weekly and
monthly, the Nov. 9 test will be the first “end-t-end test of the nationwide
system involving all participants in a synchronized, simultaneous exercise.”
It will diverge from the state and local tests in that it will use the
Emergency Action Notification, or EAN event code--the same code that would be
used in an actual national emergency. The test will last around three minutes--compared
to two minutes for the monthly tests--to assure systems don’t lock up after the
shorter time period.
The audio portion will state, “This is a Test.” For TV providers, the EAN will
automatically generate a text crawl saying, “A primary Entry Point station has
issued an Emergency Action Notification,” that does not indicate the event is a
test. Therefore, video service providers are encouraged to insert a separate
crawl or graphic indicating that the event is a test.
All participants must monitor at least two sources. The system works
hierarchically, with primary stations notifying others next in line, which in
turn notify other stations in line and so forth. The National Weather Service
Radio will not participate.
Participants will be required to fill out three online forms related to the
test, the first being due before Nov. 9, and the others, by Dec. 27, 2011. (
See “First EAS Test Form Due Before Nov. 9 Test.”)
~
Deborah D. McAdams
June 15, 2011: “First National EAS
Test Scheduled for November”
A national alert enables the president to break into regular broadcasts and
address the American public during emergencies. One has never been issued in
the history of the system, established in 1951 by then President Harry Truman
during the Cold War. It was then known as CONELRAD and included the capability
to jam aircraft homing devices. It was replaced in the 1960s by the Emergency
Broadcast System, which in turn was supplanted with the current Emergency Alert
System in 1997.
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