Click here for Adobe Acrobat version
Click here for Microsoft Word version
********************************************************
NOTICE
********************************************************
This document was converted from Microsoft Word.
Content from the original version of the document such as
headers, footers, footnotes, endnotes, graphics, and page numbers
will not show up in this text version.
All text attributes such as bold, italic, underlining, etc. from the
original document will not show up in this text version.
Features of the original document layout such as
columns, tables, line and letter spacing, pagination, and margins
will not be preserved in the text version.
If you need the complete document, download the
Microsoft Word or Adobe Acrobat version.
*****************************************************************
STATEMENT OF
CHAIRMAN MICHAEL K. POWELL
Re: Review of the Emergency Alert System, Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking
For over a half century, the United States has had in place
a national warning system utilizing, in part, our Nation's
broadcast outlets. From the CONELRAD, established in 1951 by
President Truman during the Korean War to its replacement, the
Emergency Broadcast System, established in 1963 by President
Kennedy to the modern day Emergency Alert System (EAS), our
government has sought to employ our country's media outlets as a
mechanism for warning the American public of an emergency.
A lot has changed since 1951. As the primary role of EAS
remains a national public warning system, increasingly state and
local jurisdictions have used its capabilities to notify their
citizens of local emergencies, including natural weather
disasters and in saving the lives of many abducted children
through the Amber Alert. In addition, EAS has grown from its
predecessor's birth on AM radio to FM radio, broadcast television
and wireline and wireless cable systems. Of course, the threats
to our homeland have also changed dramatically over the last
fifty years. As the world around us has changed, however, the
import of the EAS as a tool for reaching our citizenry during
time of need remains high.
We are proud to adopt this Notice today, as a result, in
part, of the recommendations of the Media Security and
Reliability Council and the Partnership for Public Warning and in
coordination with our partners at the Department of Homeland
Security and its component, FEMA and the Department of Commerce
and its component, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration's National Weather Service.
This proceeding will provide one of many vehicles by which we
collectively explore the most effective mechanism for warning the
American public of an emergency and the role of EAS as we move
further into our digital future. I commend my colleagues here at
the Commission and our partners at DHS, FEMA, DoC and NOAA for
their dedication to making our homeland a safer place for our
citizens.