WhatFinger


Federal Emergency Management Agency

November 9th’s USA Nationwide Communication Blackout 




imageIt is more than passing strange that the Feds will cut off all TV and radio broadcasts at 2 p.m. EST on November 9. In its wisdom, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued a Public Notice on June 9, 2011 (PDF) that its first ever nationwide diagnostic test of the Emergency Alert System (EAS) would occur on November 9. Reasons sketched out by FCC for the Nov. 9 test date include not wanting to test in the traditional hurricane season and to complete the task before severe winter storm set in. The 2 p.m. test time will minimize disruption during rush hours while ensuring the test occurs during working hours.
Some people consider it plain bizarre that such a test would be conducted in the afternoon hours while people are out and about rather than overnight while they are sleeping. America’s Emergency Alert System has never shut down all television, radio, cable TV and satellite radio in its entire lifespan, so there is much anxiety about why it’s being done now. The diagnostic test, will in effect, be a total communication blackout. The FCC is vague about how long the TV and radio broadcasts will be off the air.

Support Canada Free Press


“The purpose of the test is to assess the reliability and effectiveness of the EAS as a mechanism to alert the public of emergencies,” The FCC stated on its June 9 Public Notice. “Although EAS participants currently participate in state-level monthly tests and local-level weekly tests, there has never been a nationwide test of the system. The Commission, along with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), will use the results of this test to assess what works within the EAS and what does not and working together with EAS stakeholders will make improvements to the system as appropriate.” This is what the Commission says will be affected: television and other radio broadcasters, cable and wireline video service providers, radio and television satellite service providers and “others”. “We anticipate that the test will last approximately three minutes,” the Commission states on its website. “While state and local EAS messages are limited to two minutes, there is no time limit for national EAS alerts” (italics CFP’s). Three minutes is not an eternity for those at home cut off from television and radio reception, but out on the highways and freeways, it can be problematic. As commenter The-Monk notes on The Blaze, “What happens when millions of drivers all take their eyes off the road at the same time to reach down to check why their radio just went out?” Over the 15-year lifespan of EAS, Americans have become familiarized with the beep-beep-beep of the emergency broadcast warning. The FCC doesn’t need to know if John Q. Public can hear the nationwide test of the Emergency Alert System. Their test is merely a housekeeping initiative of their own broadcasters. So why not test at 4 a.m. rather than during daytime business hours? The Commission’s choice of Nov. 9 as the test date is fueling speculation from an uneasy public. Nov. 9 in Europe and in military parlance is 9/11/11. As commenters to various news sites point out, Nov. 9, 1938 is also the anniversary of Hitler’s Kristallnacht and Nov. 9, 1923 the date of Hitler’s failed Munich coup. Undoubtedly the FCC test of the EAS is happening at a time when people just don’t trust the government anymore.

Recommended by Canada Free Press



View Comments

Judi McLeod -- Bio and Archives -- Judi McLeod, Founder, Owner and Editor of Canada Free Press, is an award-winning journalist with more than 30 years’ experience in the print and online media. A former Toronto Sun columnist, she also worked for the Kingston Whig Standard. Her work has appeared throughout the ‘Net, including on Rush Limbaugh and Fox News.

Sponsored