No More Child Emergency Alerts Please
Comcast just interrupted programing for 3 minutes with an emergency child abduction alert. Only there was no information and instead a carpet cleaning commerical and radio bit about the Denver Broncos played annoyingly.
It was the kind of alert that comes on for hurricanes and testing of the emergency broadcast system. One child going missing is not a national or community-wide emergency. It's a local police issue. Emergency interruptions should be limited to dangers to everyone in the community.
It's bad enough Amber Alerts are broadcast on highway signs. They are dangerous distractions, just like texting while driving. Drivers' eyes should be on the road, not trying to read details of a crime alert. To have them forced on us in our own homes is even worse. [More...]
What law requires these interruptions and who decides that a singular missing child warrants an interruption of public broadcasting? And who was so incompetent that instead of giving information about the child, a carpet commercial and radio ad played instead? Here's the FCC notice about them. Here is the guide.
Update: It's now playing again less than 10 minutes after the first interruption. The Sheridan Police Department requested the alert. It is looking for a 9 month old baby who is with a 20 something male with crooked teeth (they mentioned his name). If they know his name, and his location, they should go find him. They don't need the help of everyone in the community. And there's a real danger it will promote vigilantism. Here's more from the New York Times in 2002.
'At least give us a way to opt out of these alerts. Let the FCC know. Call the FCC: 1-888-CALL-FCC (1-888-225-5322) voice or fax 1-866-418-0232. You can also file an online complaint, which I'm doing now.
Save the emergency broadcast system for true community emergencies, not local crimes. The Amber Alert bill was pushed through Congress by crime warrior Joe Biden and James Sensenbrenner as an add-on to a bill increasing sentences -- I complained about it repeatedly when it was under consideration. I'm going to complain about it even more if these intrusions don't stop.
Update: The Denver Post reports on the child abduction. Makes me even more convinced this was not something to interrupt public broadcasting for. The more routine these announcements become, the more likely we are to pay less attention when they air, and miss a true community-wide emergency.| < Wikileaks Publishes 5 Million Stratfor Emails | Fatal School Shooting In Ohio > |





