Speaking after Saturday's errant ballistic missile warning to
Hawaii residents, Federal Communications Commission Chairman
Ajit Pai said government officials must work to prevent future
incidents. The FCC "will focus on what steps need to be taken to
prevent a similar incident from happening again," he said.
Officials at all government levels need to work together "to
identify any vulnerabilities to false alerts and do what’s
necessary to fix them."
The alert, sent to mobile phones and broadcast on television and
radio shortly after 8 a.m. local time, was issued amid raised
tensions over North Korea’s development of nuclear weapons and
missiles.
The message, which was not corrected for 38 minutes, stated:
“EMERGENCY ALERT BALLISTIC MISSILE THREAT INBOUND TO HAWAII.
SEEK IMMEDIATE SHELTER. THIS IS NOT A DRILL.”
"The false emergency alert sent yesterday in Hawaii was
absolutely unacceptable," Pai said. "It caused a wave of panic
across the state ... Moreover, false alerts undermine public
confidence in the alerting system and thus reduce their
effectiveness during real emergencies."
Corrections should be "issued immediately in the event that a
false alert does go out," Pai said. The FCC probe so far
suggests Hawaii did not have "reasonable safeguards or process
controls in place."
The FCC has jurisdiction over the wireless alerts and has
proposed technical upgrades to precisely target them to
communities. It plans to vote on revisions to the alert system
later this month.
Hawaii Governor David Ige said on Saturday he was "angry and
disappointed" over the incident, apologized for it and said the
state would take steps to ensure it never happens again.
Ige said the alert was sent during an employee shift change at
the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency and that the state had no
automated process to get out the word that it was a false alarm.
“An employee pushed the wrong button,” Ige said.
Senator Brian Schatz, a Hawaii Democrat, spoke to Pai on
Saturday and praised him for working "with us on developing best
practices on the communications side for states and
municipalities to make sure this never happens again. This
system failed miserably, and we need to start over."
A 2013 government audit found the Federal Emergency Management
Agency has improved a federal alerting system known as the
Integrated Public Alert and Warning System, "but barriers remain
to fully implementing an integrated system."
The system can receive and authenticate internet-based alerts
from state and local government agencies and disseminate them to
the public.
Some states were reluctant to fully implement a system and that
"decreases the capability for an integrated, interoperable, and
nationwide alerting system," the report said.
(Reporting by David Shepardson in Detroit; Editing by Lisa Von
Ahn)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|
|