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Brigantine, New Jersey, a barrier
island, successfully weathers Hurricane Isabel with the help of ALERT AM. |
Sterling Heights, Michigan, uses
Emergency Advisory Radio during the "Black Out of 2003" in Northeast. |
Gallatin County, Montana, emergency
management deploys portable stations, as flood waters rise. |
Union Beach, New Jersey, Emergency
Stations advise citizens, as September 11 attacks unfold. |
Texas industry activates the largest,
synchronized Emergency Radio Network for HAZMAT use. |
States Captain Jeff Doran of the Brigantine Beach Police Department, "Our
ALERT AM system was the subject of rave reviews throughout the event. Don
Williams is the talk show host on the local station in Pleasantville. He
lives in Brigantine and listens to the ALERT AM station himself. On his
show he was telling people to tune in [to ALERT AM on 1640] for hurricane
information."
Don Williams: "I feel the Brigantine Beach emergency advisory radio
station was a great service to the community, keeping us up to date on the
latest storm developments and what they meant to Brigantine. All the
information was there. I believe it had a calming effect. No rumors. Just
facts, repeated so you could tune in every now and then and know just what
the conditions were and what was expected. A big salute to Captain Doran
and company. Great job!"
Read more from Captain
Doran about his installation. |
"We did use our radio station extensively during the 'blackout 2003.' Our
City Manager and Emergency Manager were very pleased with the battery
back-up system. Even when the City phone system went off line we were able
to update the messages with the phone at the transmitter location."
See why Sterling Heights,
Michigan, installed their Emergency Advisory Radio Station in 2001.
See a March 3, 2004,
Detroit Free Press article summarizing Southfield, Michigan's,
emergency advisory radio program and naming more than a dozen other
recently acquired ISS stations in the Detroit area. |
This spring, a dramatic jump in temperature triggered snowmelt and flash
flooding in Gallatin County, Montana (2,500 square miles). Mudslides and
deep standing water made roads impassable within hours. When county
officials declared a state of emergency, Jason Shrauger quickly pulled his
RoadRunnR Portable Emergency Advisory Radio Station into action near the
flooding, deploying portable signs to let motorists know the signal was on
the air. (See RoadRunnR web link, below.) Residents learned which roads
were closed, what to do and where to go for help.
Emergency managers in large geographic areas who can’t predict just where
the next disaster will happen use Portable Emergency Advisory Radio
Stations.
See the
Gallatin County case study. |
Union Beach, New Jersey, is just across the water from lower Manhattan.
During the September 11 attacks, emergency manager Mike Harriott advised
locals of the 9/11 heightened alert via an Emergency Advisory Radio
Station he had installed 6 years earlier. Mike erected road signs with
flashing beacons to make residents aware of the 1610 kHz signal, so they
would tune in. He also distributed informative refrigerator magnets to
every household. Installed in anticipation of the flooding and evacuations common to the
Jersey shore, Harriott’s station has provided unexpected benefits beyond
9/11. “Not only has it helped our emergency department enhance community
communications,” he states, “but it provides a better work environment for
our department.” Mike recommends Emergency Advisory Radio to every
community because of “the ease it offers to alert the public . . . [it’s]
a way to provide up-to-date, real-time information.”
See the
Union Beach case study. |
Dow and the Brazosport
Emergency Response Agency have found a way to alert people in the event of
an incident at the behemoth plant facility – one of the world’s largest.
Seven ALERT AM Emergency Advisory Radio Stations – all synchronized with
one another – will encircle the facility by the end of this year. (See the
ALERT AM web link, below.) This network of simulcast stations will keep
citizens informed 24 hours a day. The system, designed by Information
Station Specialists, uses exclusive RealTIME Global Positioning
System technology to allow each of the stations to broadcast the the same
messages on the same frequency with minimal inter-station interference.
Dow’s network of Emergency Advisory Radio Stations will soon be the largest
synchronized network of its kind in the world.
Reference: Chandler
Westjohn of Dow Chemical. |
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| Cover your community with accessible
information, 24 hours a day. ALERT AM gives an emergency manager the
ability to create a library of specialized broadcast messages, ready
to put on the air in an instant when a situation arises. Install
virtually anywhere, with full remote operation by telephone or cell
phone. AM signal range is 3-5 miles (25-75 square miles). Link ALERT
AM to a siren system and trigger special messages as sirens sound.
Weather and EAS warnings are broadcast automatically, when
designated counties are selected. Options include 4-day battery
backup, multi-station synchronization, power outage notification and
more.
See the ALERT AM Emergency Advisory Radio Station web page. |
The ALERT AM broadcast has switched from
promoting daily events to preventing deadly ones. Trigger the bright
triple-flash LED’s into action through your existing two-way radio
frequency. Flashing ALERT Signs can also activate automatically when
your community’s sirens sound. Powered by the sun, these signs can
be installed inexpensively, virtually anywhere.
See
the Flashing ALERT Signs web page to signal your citizens that the
situation is critical. |
Take Emergency Advisory Radio on the road
to disaster(s). This portable radio station is totally wireless,
solar powered and cellp hone controlled. Portable signs erect
quickly to tell motorists how to find the information radio
frequency. Affording the same range as fixed-point ALERT AM
stations, RoadRunnR stations can make “all the difference” in
emergencies that can happen anywhere (HAZMAT, terrorism, tornado)
and those that move (traffic congestion, flooding and fire). Take
RoadRunnR to your next mega-event (the way Los Angeles County does)
and provide updated parking, traffic and safety information.
See the
RoadRunnR Portable Advisory Radio Station web page. |
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See ISS ALERT Stations in
use across America |
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