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  • Animals and Emergencies: Real-Life Chaos, Companion Pets, and Disaster Preparedness
    2026/04/16

    What happens when emergencies involve your pets or animals? In this lively and unfiltered episode of The Alerting Authority, hosts Eddie Bertola and Jeannette Sutton bring in their pets—complete with roaming goats, curious cats, and plenty of unexpected moments—to explore the critical role animals play in disasters.

    Joined by Dr. Sarah DeYoung, an expert in disaster research and companion animals, the conversation dives into how pets, livestock, and even exotic animals impact evacuation decisions, emergency messaging, and public safety outcomes. From goats knocking over cameras to cats hiding during evacuations, this episode blends humor with powerful insights on preparedness, warning systems, and real-world challenges.

    You’ll learn:

    • How animals influence human decision-making during emergencies
    • Why early warnings are essential for households with pets and livestock
    • The hidden risks of evacuating (or not evacuating) with animals
    • Practical preparedness tips for pet owners and emergency managers
    • The emotional and psychological impact of losing animals in disasters
    • How organizations and policies are evolving to support animal safety

    Plus, hear firsthand stories from the field—including hurricane evacuations, wildfire impacts, and the chaos of managing animals in real-time.

    🎙️ Sponsored by HQE Systems – providing integrated alerting and notification solutions to help emergency managers simplify complex communication during crises.

    Whether you're an emergency manager, pet owner, or just love animals, this episode offers valuable insights into making communities safer—for both people and the animals they care about.

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    58 分
  • Missing Persons Alerts Explained: AMBER, Ashanti & WEA—What Works, What Fails, and What Saves Lives | Sponsored by Everbridge
    2026/04/09

    In this episode of The Alerting Authority, hosts Jeannette Sutton and Eddie Bertola sit down with veteran alerting leader Carri Gordon to break down the evolution, effectiveness, and future of missing persons alerts.

    With nearly 35 years of experience in emergency communications and public safety, Carri shares her journey from early dispatch operations—long before modern alerting systems—to leading statewide alert programs and now serving as a national subject matter expert on the Ashanti Alert initiative.

    This episode dives deep into:

    • How AMBER Alerts evolved from manual processes to real-time notifications
    • The critical role of Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) in saving lives
    • Why actionable information matters more than awareness alone
    • The truth about alert criteria, delays, and decision-making
    • How the Ashanti Alert Act is transforming missing adult alerting nationwide
    • Lessons learned from real cases—both successful recoveries and tragic outcomes
    • Why the public should never disable emergency alerts on their phones

    You’ll also hear firsthand stories of alerts leading to recoveries within minutes—and the hard lessons that reshaped how alerting authorities operate today.

    Whether you’re in emergency management, law enforcement, public safety communications, or simply want to understand how these systems protect communities, this episode provides expert insight into the science, strategy, and human impact behind every alert.

    🎙️ Sponsored by Everbridge

    This episode is proudly sponsored by Everbridge, a global leader in critical event management (CEM). Trusted by over 6,500 organizations worldwide, Everbridge helps governments and enterprises anticipate, respond to, and recover from critical events using powerful, AI-driven alerting and resilience solutions.

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    58 分
  • Do Alerts Really Work? RAND Study Part II | Who Gets Missed, Opt-Outs, & Alert Fatigue Explained
    2026/04/02

    In Part II of our deep dive into the groundbreaking RAND national alerting study, we go beyond the headline stat that 91% of Americans received the Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA) and uncover the real story: who didn’t—and why it matters.

    Host Jeannette Sutton is joined again by RAND researchers Rachel Steratore and Andy Parker to explore critical gaps in emergency alert systems, including:

    • Why rural communities are less likely to receive alerts
    • How age, device type, and mobile carriers impact delivery
    • The surprising truth about opt-out behavior (especially among younger and lower-income users)
    • The role of awareness, trust, and alert fatigue in public response
    • How disability, language, and accessibility factor into alert effectiveness
    • Why “sending the alert” doesn’t guarantee people actually receive—or act on—it

    This episode also tackles one of the biggest unanswered questions in emergency communication: Do alerts actually lead to action?

    You’ll hear insights on:

    • The difference between receiving, understanding, and acting on alerts
    • How risk perception (fear vs. familiarity) shapes behavior
    • Why education and public awareness are major missing pieces
    • The future of alerting across devices (phones, watches, smart tech, and more)
    • What the next generation of research must focus on

    If you’re an emergency manager, public safety professional, researcher, or just someone curious about how alerts work during real crises—this episode is essential listening.

    👉 Watch Part I first for the full context of the RAND study
    👉 Don’t forget to like, subscribe, and share to help improve public safety awareness

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    53 分
  • When the Mountain Burned: Inside the Ruidoso Wildfires and the Alert That Saved a Town
    2026/03/26

    In this gripping episode of The Alerting Authority, hosts Jeannette Sutton and Eddie Bertola sit down with Eric Queller, Emergency Manager for the mountain community of Ruidoso, to unpack one of the most intense wildfire response operations in recent memory.

    What began as a routine fire-weather day on June 17, 2024, quickly escalated into a fast-moving disaster as the South Fork and Salt Fires ignited within the Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI), threatening thousands of residents and tens of thousands of seasonal visitors. Within hours, a quiet mountain town of 7,000 surged into crisis mode—with a population nearing 90,000 during peak tourist season.

    Eric provides a vivid, moment-by-moment account of the day everything changed: from the first call reporting smoke in Upper Canyon, to hearing elite firefighting crews forced to retreat due to extreme fire behavior, to the realization that this was no ordinary incident—but a worst-case scenario unfolding in real time.

    Listeners are taken inside the Emergency Operations Center as it rapidly escalates from routine monitoring to full Level 1 activation. Eric recounts the weight of critical decisions, including issuing a rare and urgent “GO NOW” evacuation alert that ultimately led to the full evacuation of Ruidoso—something the town had never practiced at scale.

    This episode dives deep into the realities of modern emergency management, including:

    -The challenges of protecting a high-risk Wildland-Urban Interface community

    -Managing a dynamic population with tens of thousands of tourists unfamiliar with local risks

    -The strengths and limitations of the Ready, Set, Go framework—and why it may fall short in real-world scenarios

    -How clear, plain-language alerts can cut through confusion and save lives
    The importance of multi-channel alerting systems, including IPAWS, Wireless

    -Emergency Alerts, NOAA Weather Radio, AM/FM broadcasting, and even door-to-door notifications

    -The role of local infrastructure—like Ruidoso’s own government-run radio station—in delivering trusted, continuous communication during crisis

    Eric also shares the emotional and operational intensity of working nearly four straight days without rest, coordinating with state officials, and making high-stakes decisions with incomplete information—all while the fire spread rapidly across rugged terrain.

    Beyond the fire itself, the conversation foreshadows the cascading disasters that often follow wildfires, including flash flooding risks in burn-scarred landscapes—highlighting why emergency management doesn’t end when the flames go out.

    This episode is both a masterclass in crisis communication and a sobering reminder of how quickly disasters can escalate—and how critical timely, decisive alerts are in protecting lives.

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    58 分
  • Training 190 Alert Senders, Preventing WEA Mistakes & Reaching Every Community: Inside San Diego’s Alerting System
    2026/03/19

    In this episode of The Alerting Authority, hosts Jeannette Sutton and Eddie Bertola sit down with Dan Vasquez, former Alert & Warning Coordinator for the San Diego County Office of Emergency Services, to break down how one region built one of the most coordinated emergency alerting systems in the United States.

    From wildfires and hurricanes to multilingual communication and accessibility, Dan shares the real story behind:

    • Training 190+ alert originators across 18 cities and a county
    • Preventing mistakes like the infamous Hawaii false missile alert
    • Writing clear alerts using Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA)
    • Coordinating alerts across multiple jurisdictions
    • Reaching multilingual communities with trusted messengers
    • Building the Partner Relay network for accessible crisis communication
    • Creating policies and agreements that took 20 months to finalize

    You’ll also hear how San Diego’s Unified Disaster Council model allows multiple jurisdictions to collaborate on warning systems, funding, and training, something many emergency management agencies are trying to replicate.

    Plus, Dan explains the work of the Language Accessibility Alert & Warning Workgroup, a national initiative focused on making emergency alerts accessible to everyone, regardless of language, disability, or technology.

    If you work in emergency management, public safety, crisis communication, or government technology, this episode is packed with real-world lessons on how to deliver alerts that are accurate, timely, and accessible.

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    57 分
  • Frozen Iguanas, Winter Storm Alerts, WEA Messaging & Emergency Communication Best Practices
    2026/03/12

    In this episode of the Alerting Authority Podcast, Jeannette Sutton and Eddie Bertola discuss winter storm alerts, Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA), and real-world emergency communication examples from across the United States. From the 2022 Buffalo blizzard to recent extreme cold warnings, the hosts analyze how local emergency managers used alert origination software, warning templates, and public safety messaging to keep communities informed.

    The episode highlights best practices for emergency alerts, the importance of layered communication, and how agencies can improve preparedness through message templates, training, and planning. Learn how alerting authorities can better serve vulnerable populations, provide shelter information, and use WEA, social media, and local partnerships to deliver life-saving information.

    Sponsored by HQE Systems — providing next-generation outdoor warning sirens, indoor notification systems, and alert origination software controlled from one platform.

    Subscribe for more emergency management, public warning, and disaster communication insights.

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    44 分
  • Inside the FEMA National Alert: Deanne Criswell on Sending the U.S. Emergency Alert
    2026/03/05

    Former FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell joins The Alerting Authority, sponsored by HQE Systems, to discuss what it was really like to send the nationwide IPAWS emergency alert to every phone in the United States.

    In this episode, Criswell shares behind-the-scenes insights from the 2023 national emergency alert test, explains how FEMA manages the Integrated Public Alert & Warning System (IPAWS), and discusses the growing challenges of misinformation, disinformation, and foreign influence during disasters.

    Hosts Eddie Bertola and Dr. Jeannette Sutton explore how emergency managers can build trusted community networks, improve Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA) messaging, and ensure equitable alerting for diverse populations.

    Criswell also reflects on her time leading FEMA, responding to major disasters, and why people-first emergency management and equity are critical to disaster preparedness and recovery.

    Topics covered include:

    - Sending the national emergency alert to every U.S. phone

    - How IPAWS and Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) work

    - Misinformation and foreign influence during disasters

    - Building trusted communication networks in communities

    - Equity in emergency management and disaster recovery

    - Lessons for local alerting authorities and emergency managers

    - The future of public alerting and warning systems

    If you work in emergency management, public safety, disaster communications, or crisis response, this episode provides critical insights into the future of public warning systems and disaster communication.

    This episode is sponsored by HQEsystems.com

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    46 分
  • Engagement Before Emergency: Building Buy-In Before Disaster Strikes
    2026/02/26

    This episode of The Alerting Authority features emergency manager Ashley Morris, whose journey from childhood storm enthusiast in New Mexico to community-focused alerting leader in Central Texas blends meteorology, public engagement, and hands-on system building.

    Ashley shares how her early dream of working for the National Weather Service evolved into a career in emergency management—where science, social media strategy, and relationship-building intersect. From launching alerting programs from scratch to developing policy across agencies, she discusses what it takes to build confidence, competence, and collaboration around tools like FEMA’s IPAWS.

    The conversation explores:

    • Growing social media presence from zero followers in a rural, tourism-driven Texas county
    • Partnering with chambers of commerce, small businesses, and community leaders to amplify messaging
    • Lessons learned from larger jurisdictions like Fairfax County and applying them in smaller communities
    • The importance of policy, redundancy, and hands-on training in alerting systems
    • Why visibility, trust, and relationships matter just as much as technology
    • The future of alerting—from AI and the Internet of Things to flood warning innovations in Texas

    Ashley emphasizes a powerful truth: if emergency management isn’t visible, it doesn’t exist. This episode is packed with practical insights for alerting authorities, PIOs, and emergency managers looking to strengthen trust, improve alerting confidence, and build resilient communities before the next disaster strikes.

    This episode of The Alerting Authority is brought to by HQE Systems.

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    46 分