We'll call you: new emergency alert system

KENT — Most Americans have heard these instructions so many times that they are almost an instinct: In an emergency, dial 911.

But that system is about to be turned around, as more and more towns adopt a system where residents receive a call from 911 alerting them that an emergency is occuring.

The new emergency notification service, where town and school officials here and in other towns would be able to notify residents by phone, Internet and other methods, may soon be online and operational.

At the Board of Selectmen’s meeting on Jan. 5, Kent Emergency Management Director Tony Amon reported that the state has signed up with a company that will provide a computer system to notify residents of emergencies. Kent is eligible to get the system for free, he said.

The system would be funded with a $2,500 grant from the Homeland Security Department and would utilize the town’s 911 database, he said.

“Suppose a train falls over and spills some very bad chemicals,� Amon explained. “What the system would do is find the area where the spill is, and call everyone in that area about the spill. Through the system, you could also notify them via Instant Messaging to their computer, with a text message to their cell phone or through e-mail.�

Amon said the system could also be used to notify residents about Amber Alerts, school closings, road closings — or even book sales and fundraisers, if the townspeople want it.

“It’s a valuable tool and right now we’re slowly starting to get it online for the fire department,� he said. “We want to get word of the system out to people so they can sign up for it when it fully comes online.�

Amon did not say when the service would become fully operational or when residents could sign up for it.

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