By Mike Snider, USA TODAY
Consumers will get emergency alerts for hurricanes, tornadoes and other disasters on their cellphones as part of a new alert network to be announced Tuesday by the Federal Communications Commission.
The Personal Localized Alerting Network (PLAN) will allow emergency officials to send geographically targeted text messages to cellphones in areas where danger threatens. "The traditional alerts on radio and TV are still important, and they will continue, but more and more, mobile devices are becoming essential. You have them with you," says FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski. "In the event of a major disaster, government authorities can get lifesaving information to you quickly."
Tuesday, at the World Trade Center site in New York, Genachowski, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator W. Craig Fugate will announce that New York will have the free PLAN service operational by year's end. Officials also expect to have Washington, D.C., on board by then. Four cellular providers AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon have collaborated to voluntarily initiate the service prior to an April 2012 deadline for PLAN enaction throughout the nation. Officials hope to include the entire metropolitan area of the two cities.
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www.usatoday.com/tech/news/2011-···ts_n.htm