Alert system failures during January fires in Los Angeles County

ladn

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An independent after action report of Los Angeles County’s response to January’s deadly wildfires found a lack of resources and outdated policies for sending emergency alerts led to delays in warning residents about the need to evacuate as flames began consuming neighborhoods in Altadena and Pacific Palisades...

(via KTLA: https://ktla.com/news/california/wi...resources-outdated-alert-process-report-says/)
and (LA County response to deadly fires slowed by lack of resources, outdated alert process, report says)

I found this paragraph particularly interesting:

...The report cites critical staffing shortages including a high number of sheriff’s deputy vacancies and an under-resourced Office of Emergency Management. In addition, first responders and incident commanders were unable to consistently share real-time information due to unreliable cellular connectivity, inconsistent field reporting methods, and the use of various unconnected communication platforms...

I find this disturbing, but not surprising. LA City and County have some of the largest, multi-layered, most costly communications systems in the country. The LA County RICS system was supposed to be the apex of interoperable technology. Smaller cities were subscribers to the ICIS system. LAPD and LAFD had their own supposedly robust system and all were augmented by California and Federal radio systems.
 

Eng74

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There are a couple things too that I did not see mentioned, people have to signup for the alerts. We have a Kern Alerts in my county and you have to be signed up to receive them. Also, if the cell phone system is not working in the area, you are out of luck. We used to have a revers 911 system where it would call all the houses in an area, but a large part of the population have cut out a landline for their house since they always have their cell phone.
 
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