and another one
Thanks for all the responses about gov't agencies. In return, I give you more questions!
Small, wealthy New England town. Residents start freaking out inexplicably, causing car accidents, enacting violence against each other. What's the protocol, in terms of declaring and enforcing a state of emergency? Does the mayor direct activity? How is the emergency broadcasting service put into effect? What would be the chain of command, to get word to the police and press not to go near the site?
I don't need this to be perfect, but I do want it to have verisimilitude.
Small, wealthy New England town. Residents start freaking out inexplicably, causing car accidents, enacting violence against each other. What's the protocol, in terms of declaring and enforcing a state of emergency? Does the mayor direct activity? How is the emergency broadcasting service put into effect? What would be the chain of command, to get word to the police and press not to go near the site?
I don't need this to be perfect, but I do want it to have verisimilitude.
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Hmmm. Perhaps a local militia takes it upon itself to re-establish order? Then the media contact and the chain of command would be fairly simple.
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Emergency Alert System
The Emergency Broadcast System (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Broadcast_System) has been superceded by the newer Emergency Alert System (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Alert_System) (EAS).
At WMBR, we have a device which monitors two other local radio stations (WBZ and another one I forget) listening for modem-style tones. When the appropriate tones are broadcast on either of those upstream stations, our EAS unit automatically interrupts our normal programming and rebroadcasts whatever alert message it received from the upstream station.
So the basic idea is that emergency alerts are first broadcast from the local primary stations (such as WBZ). These alerts begin and end with special tones that are detected by equipment at smaller stations, which then rebroadcast the alerts.
It should also be noted that, if someone with tech clue within a radio station wished to bypass the EAS system, it's not too difficult, at least not at a station like WMBR. In fact, a couple of years ago our EAS unit failed during a required weekly test (RWT). It was supposed to interrupt our airchain for only a few seconds to broadcast the test tones, but it cut us off and then croaked. A long-time hippyish DJ at WMBR with minimal technical clue knew how to bypass the unit using our patchbays: similar to ancient phone systems, where you use patch cables to arbitrarily route audio signals.
Other broadcasting outlets have similar requirements. See the Wikipedia page (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Alert_System) for more on that. Hope this helps.
Re: Emergency Alert System
Thanks for the help, I really appreciate it.
Re: Emergency Alert System
A report (http://www.fas.org/irp/crs/RL32527.pdf) by CRS (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congressional_Research_Service) states:
It's also worth noting that the EAS system was not activated on 9/11 (http://www.rwonline.com/reference-room/special-report/rw-eas2.shtml), not even locally in New York or Washington DC. However, in recent years it has often been used for Amber alerts, and in that case the decision to declare an Amber Alert is made by the police organization investigating the abduction. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMBER_Alert)
Good luck!
Re: Emergency Alert System
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Small new england town... does it have a town council instead of a mayor? Mayors are usually for cities. You might have a town clerk and several town council members around on any given day in the town hall, and a police and a fire chief in their respective stations. My guess is our town has about 20 FT policemen, not all on duty at once. Hm, my guess is the chain would be, police chief realizes he can't deal and calls the state police? Hm. You might research this by interviewing someone actually in this line of work.
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