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Disaster Support For Broadcasters

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March 2009


When a disaster occurs, citizens depend upon local broadcasters for access to lifesaving public safety and emergency announcements. The FCC recognizes the important role of local broadcasters in helping Federal, State, and local officials provide the general public with advanced notification of and instruction during disasters and emergencies. The FCC's Media Bureau and the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau (Bureaus), in partnership with FEMA, help ensure that local broadcasters are capable of carrying out these public safety responsibilities, by conducting the following activities:

Outreach

The Bureaus reach out to broadcasters, state broadcast associations, and the National Association of Broadcasters prior to a known threat of an approaching fire, flood, tropical storm, or hurricane to determine the preparedness status of the stations and to exchange important emergency contact information. The Bureaus also follow up as appropriate during and after the event has occurred.

In case of a no-notice event, such as a major earthquake or wide spread power outage, the Bureaus reach out to broadcasters in the disaster area as soon as possible after the event has occurred. The Bureaus then aid broadcasters needing assistance by coordinating their needs with the state emergency operations center, National Coordinating Center of the National Communications System, and with FEMA officials in the Federal Joint Field Office (JFO) that is established at or near the event. If a state determines it cannot provide the requested assistance or refers the request to FEMA, and the Bureaus determine that such assistance is essential, the FCC will request that FEMA issue a mission assignment for Logistical Coordination Assistance (discussed in the next section).

During major disasters, the FCC activates its Disaster Information Reporting System (DIRS) to collect information on the operation of key communications systems, such as broadcast facilities, to supplement the outreach efforts.

Disaster Information Reporting System

DIRS provides a systematic, automated process for communications providers to report the status of their infrastructures during a disaster. Participation in the DIRS process by broadcasters and other communications providers is voluntary. FEMA and FCC emergency response personnel (ESF-2) supporting restoration efforts use DIRS reports to coordinate needed assistance (e.g., fuel, generators, etc.).

DIRS Provides:

  • Up-to-date information on communications status during a disaster
  • Daily updates to track restoration progress
  • Automated, systematic process for repeatability
  • Consistent data – same type of information from each company
  • Points of contact with subject-matter expertise

Benefits to Broadcasters for Participating in DIRS:

  • Provides an avenue for broadcasters to receive help during emergencies, e.g., need a generator, need fuel, etc.
  • Allows a broadcaster to identify the appropriate contact for his/her station during emergencies. This will reduce the number of calls to the wrong people.
  • Reduces the number of requests from various government agencies for status of each station. Other government agencies will rely on the FCC (DIRS) for status of each broadcast station.
  • Aids in fulfilling the broadcaster's civic duty during emergencies.

DIRS Collects the Following Information on Broadcast Stations in Disaster Areas:

  • Station name (call letters)
  • Type of station (TV/AM/FM)
  • Station status (up, down)
  • Power status (on generator, on battery, etc.)
  • Fuel needs
  • Location of transmitter
  • Other needs

How to Enroll in DIRS:

Establish a User ID on DIRS (This also gives the FCC contact information)
Go to URL - https://www.fcc.gov/nors/disaster/
Input contact information to establish a User ID

Questions about DIRS?

John Healy – john.healy@fcc.gov   202-418-2448
David Ahn – david.ahn@fcc.gov  202-418-0853

Logistical Coordination Assistance for Broadcasters

The FCC and FEMA have developed a logistical coordination assistance procedure to provide assistance when state aid is not available. Under this procedure, FEMA requests that FCC personnel be deployed to the JFO to provide assistance to communications companies, including broadcasters. FCC personnel coordinate actions with and between other private sector communications companies, and local businesses (e.g., home supply companies, fuel fleet carriers, etc.) to determine who can provide the needed assistance. FCC staff remain in the JFO to continue their coordination efforts on behalf of the broadcasters until coordination is complete.

Multi-Lingual Emergency Broadcast Support

Certain areas of the country have very few non-English broadcasters. When disasters occur in these areas and large numbers of broadcast facilities are out of service, non-English speaking citizens may not have access to public alert and warning broadcasts in other languages. The FCC, FEMA, and Department of Defense (DoD) have developed an effective procedure to provide the necessary non-English emergency broadcasts. FEMA has prepared a pre-scripted mission assignment for deployment of DoD mobile, self-sustained AM/FM radio stations with multi-lingual broadcast capability during a disaster to provide English and multi-lingual public alert and warning broadcasts when the local broadcast capability has been severely damaged. When a DoD station is deployed, the FCC is charged with authorizing the frequency and power level, and coordinating the operation of the station with federal, state and local emergency operations officials, local broadcasters, and the state broadcasting association.

Hurricane Response Efforts: Gustav and Ike

The FCC and FEMA took action during Hurricanes Gustav and Ike to ensure that local broadcasts of public safety and emergency announcements reached the public, including non-English speaking citizens. A Multi-Lingual Emergency Broadcast Support pre-scripted mission assignment was issued twice by FEMA. In the first instance, the FCC requested that FEMA issue a mission assignment for DoD to deploy a mobile radio station to New Orleans when Spanish language station KGLA was silenced by Hurricane Gustav. The mission assignment was later canceled at the request of the FCC when Clear Channel Radio, AT&T, and Jefferson Parish officials jointly helped the station resume its broadcasts.

In the second instance, the FCC requested that FEMA issue a mission assignment for DoD to deploy a mobile radio station to the Galveston, Texas area where Hurricane Ike had knocked sixty-two local radio stations and seven TV stations off the air. This mission assignment was later canceled at the request of the FCC after it conducted outreach to local broadcasters and learned that the broadcasters had implemented other procedures to restore their operations and reach their listeners.

In the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Ike, broadcasters requested assistance from the state for help to restore their operations. Those stations required generators, diesel fuel, debris removal, and/or tower repair assistance. The state was unable to provide the requested assistance or refer their requests to FEMA.

The FCC and FEMA immediately developed and implemented a logistical coordination assistance support process whereby deployed personnel at the JFO would receive the requests for assistance from communications companies, and coordinate actions among other private sector communications companies and commercial businesses to determine who can provide the needed assistance.

With FEMA's concurrence, FCC staff remained in the JFO for an additional week to continue their coordination efforts on behalf of the requesting companies.