Emergency Management Blogs

Emergency Management Blog - Rick Wimberly & Lorin Bristow Alerting and Warning
Alerts & Notifications

by Rick Wimberly & Lorin Bristow: Best practices for emergency notification programs

Subscribe via RSS | About this Blog | Contact Rick Wimberly & Lorin Bristow

Showcasing Alerting Standards
September 23, 2009
Bookmark and Share

Latest Blog Posts RSS

Adam Crowe - Disasters 2.0 To Blog or Not to Blog - Why it Matters in Emergency Management
Feb 03 Blogs are great tools for emergency managers to use…
Emergency Management Blog - Eric Holdeman: Disaster Zone Survey on GIS for EOCs
Feb 01 This is a quick survey on the use of GIS in Emergency Operation Centers (EOC)…
Valerie Lucus: Campus Emergency Management Blog Documenting Institutional Knowledge
Feb 02 What happens when the info you need for your Emergency Management program left with that guy who retired last year?…

The Common Alerting Protocol (CAP) has been percolating for several years. Its intent is to provide a standard for emergency notification, alert, and warning messages so that one message can serve all systems. CAP has been slow to catch on. Many notification systems in the field don't support it. Some key vendors don't use it, even though FEMA has endorsed it and a CAP requirement shows up from time-to-time in requests for proposals.

Some industry and government organizations with interests in notifications, alerts, and warnings get together soon to give CAP a nudge. At a summit in Baltimore next week, they'll talk about CAP - even demonstrate how it works. The summit is sponsored by OASIS (Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards), the group with the lead creating the CAP standard. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security's Office of Interoperability and Compatability (DHS OIC) is supporting the event.

In addition to CAP, sessions will be held on what's called Emergency Digital Exchange Language (EDXL). EDXL is an "umbrella" standard, designed to facilitate emergency communications beyond notifications, alerts, and warnings.

We applaud the effort. Standards will support the move toward managed system-of-systems to ensure that multi-modal delivery works. Standards generally evolve slowly, and the path to adoption is often difficult. But, it sure seems that this is taking a particularly long time and we don't see CAP and EDXL being embraced aggressively by end-users and key vendors at this point. Perhaps the summit will help a bit, but more whollap is needed to really make the CAP dream a reality.
Top

Comments


Add Your Comment

You are solely responsible for the content of your comments. We reserve the right to remove comments that are considered profane, vulgar, obscene, factually inaccurate, off-topic, or considered a personal attack.




Latest Emergency Management News

FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate Shares 3 Lessons from 2011

2011 was a memorable year for the emergency management field — and for the many Americans impacted by disasters.
Aging Bridges, Water Systems Put the Public at Risk

Much of this infrastructure is decades old and will take millions of dollars to maintain and replace.
America’s Crumbling Infrastructure Will Challenge Emergency Managers For Decades

Every event related to critical infrastructure is unique, leaving planners to face more unknowns than knowns.

4 Ways to Get EM

Subscribe to Emergency Management MagazineFollow Emergency Management on TwitterSubscribe to Emergency Management HeadlinesSubscribe to Emergency Management Newsletters


Blog Archives