Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

No Opting Out: Canadians To Get Emergency Alerts On Their Phones Soon

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Mar, 2018 12:28 PM
    TORONTO — Canada's wireless providers are preparing for a looming update to the National Public Alerting System that will force smartphones to sound an ominous alarm when an emergency alert is triggered.
     
     
    In case of emergencies including Amber Alerts, forest fires, natural disasters, terrorist attacks or severe weather, officials will be able to send a localized alert that will compel compatible phones on an LTE network to emit an alarm — the same shrill beeping that accompanies TV and radio emergency alerts — and display a bilingual text warning.
     
     
    The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission gave wireless providers a year to implement the system with a deadline of April 6 to be ready to go live. A report by the CRTC said most wireless providers were in favour of an opt-out option or the ability to disable the alarm for some types of alerts, but consumers can't turn off the warnings.
     
     
    "People cannot opt out of this," said CRTC spokeswoman Patricia Valladao. "There is a high importance that people — want it or not — receive these alerts."
     
     
    If a smartphone is turned off it cannot be forced on by an alert. Similarly, if a smartphone is muted an alert cannot force the device to play the alarm. While a broad range of popular phones are compatible with the program, wireless providers have released different lists of phones that will receive the alerts on their networks. Consumers can look up their phone and more information on the program at alertready.ca.
     
     
    Patrick Tanguy, an assistant deputy minister with Public Safety Canada, said while it was ultimately the CRTC's decision to keep consumers from having the option of opting out, he defended that call.
     
     
     
     
    "When you're getting those alerts your life is at risk," Tanguy said. "So it's not there's potentially a danger, there is a danger."
     
     
    Similar alerting systems are already in place in other countries including the U.S., where a false alarm in Hawaii about a supposed missile attack made global headlines in January.
     
     
    New Zealand rolled out a similar system in November but a month earlier had a little snafu. A startling test alert was accidentally sent out at 1:30 a.m., which prompted many to seek ways to opt-out of the system.
     
     
    There was similar grumbling in New York in 2013 when an alert about a missing child was issued at 3:51 a.m., prompting a debate about whether people should be roused from their sleep in such instances.
     
     
    Saskatchewan's provincial emergency public alerting program also had a bit of a hiccup in January when users of the optional SaskAlert app got false warnings about a flood and a wildfire. Officials later said some staff were training on the system and sent the alerts out by mistake.
     
     
    Tanguy admitted the new federal system "is not 100 per cent bulletproof" but said officials from the various levels of government have been working on researching best practices and training "to make sure those events don't happen like it happened in Hawaii."
     
     
    The mobile alert system is administered by Pelmorex Corp., the parent company of the Weather Network, which will be sending out test alerts in early May to get consumers used to the program.
     
     
    "People should hopefully be familiar with that sound by the time they get an actual emergency message," said Paul Temple, senior vice-president of regulatory and strategic affairs at Pelmorex.
     
     
    "Nowadays pretty well everyone has a phone and you're not necessarily listening to the radio or watching TV, so it's just another way to reach people quickly when their life is possibly in danger."
     
     
    The CRTC has said wireless providers cannot charge a separate fee on consumers' bills for participating in the mobile alerting system.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Island Man Sentenced To Jail For Fatally Beating A Four-Month-Old Puppy

    Vancouver Island Man Sentenced To Jail For Fatally Beating A Four-Month-Old Puppy
    The BC chapter of the SPCA says Robert Carolan of Duncan was handed a sentence of four months and is banned from owning animals for 10 years.

    Vancouver Island Man Sentenced To Jail For Fatally Beating A Four-Month-Old Puppy

    'Waited So Long:' Quebec Man Charged In Alberta Woman's Death 16 Years Ago

    'Waited So Long:' Quebec Man Charged In Alberta Woman's Death 16 Years Ago
    A Quebec man has been arrested in the slaying of a 21-year-old woman 16 years ago.

    'Waited So Long:' Quebec Man Charged In Alberta Woman's Death 16 Years Ago

    Challenges Ahead For NDP's Jagmeet Singh After Rousing Party Convention

    Challenges Ahead For NDP's Jagmeet Singh After Rousing Party Convention
    OTTAWA — Federal New Democratic Party Leader Jagmeet Singh emerged from his party's national convention with a strong mandate to overcome the many challenges ahead for the NDP to beat the Liberals at their own game and deliver in 2019.

    Challenges Ahead For NDP's Jagmeet Singh After Rousing Party Convention

    Elderly Man Dead Following Basement Fire In East Vancouver Home

    Elderly Man Dead Following Basement Fire In East Vancouver Home
    VANCOUVER — An elderly man has died following a house fire in a Vancouver after emergency crews had difficulty finding him in a basement suite.

    Elderly Man Dead Following Basement Fire In East Vancouver Home

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Attacks Web Giants, Defends Taxes In Call-to-arms For Equality

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Attacks Web Giants, Defends Taxes In Call-to-arms For Equality
    Jagmeet Singh issued a call-to-arms against inequality as he sought to put his stamp on the federal NDP on Saturday by taking aim at the Trudeau government and foreign web giants while offering a full-fledged defence of taxes and public services.

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Attacks Web Giants, Defends Taxes In Call-to-arms For Equality

    B.C. Mom Whose Two Sons Overdosed Urges Doctors To Check Prescription History

    B.C. Mom Whose Two Sons Overdosed Urges Doctors To Check Prescription History
    Letters she sent in both cases to the College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia alleging the careless prescribing of potentially dangerous medications are neatly organized among responses from doctors.

    B.C. Mom Whose Two Sons Overdosed Urges Doctors To Check Prescription History