Community Corner

Don't Touch That Dial: Govt. Tests TV's Emergency Alert System Today

If you do touch that dial at 1 p.m., you'll find the test running on every station across the country, the first time that's been done.

This is a test. It's only a test.

That's what FEMA, the Federal Communications Commission and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration want you to know when they broadcast the first nationwide Emergency Alert System Test at 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 9. 

The EAS is the media-based system that alerts the public to emergencies on a local, state and national level. 

Find out what's happening in Frankfortwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

And it's just a test. Not a train derailment, alien invasion or--as Mokena Patch editor Paul Dailling pointed out to me--both, like in the movie Super 8. The three government agencies are trying to "identify necessary improvements so that all levels of the system can better serve our communities and deliver critical information that will save lives and property," according to FEMA's website.

One note for Frankfort residents: Comcast, the villlage's cable TV provider, is telling customers they might need to reboot their cable boxes in the rare case that service doesn't return after the test is over. Also, Comcast's on-demand video system will not work during the test, which means you can't catch up on last night's episode of Man Up! And when you think about it, that's probably a good thing for everyone involved.

Find out what's happening in Frankfortwith free, real-time updates from Patch.


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