Santa Clara County, California is using social networking to spread awareness of its emergency alert system.  Through the county’s interactive website, AlertSCC.com, residents can send personalized photo messages to their friends and family, asking them to register to receive mobile and email alerts.  County officials hope that the “I Love You. Please Sign Up.” campaign will encourage broader participation in the emergency alert system and help to ensure a unified community response to disaster.

By Gwendolyn Mitchell and Laurel Anderson, PublicCEO.com, July 8, 2010

Santa Clara County is using a novel approach to encourage people living or working in the county to sign up at AlertSCC.com to receive emergency alert messages.

Patterning its newest public awareness campaign tool after social networking web sites, the County’s AlertSCC site is now a place where people can go to share a photo along with an invitation to friends and loved ones to sign up their mobile devices. And in the future, they might be featured in an AlertSCC ad campaign.

“We take seriously the responsibility for making sure people are prepared for disasters,” said Santa Clara County Board President Ken Yeager, who championed bringing the AlertSCC system to the county.  ”But just because it’s a serious matter doesn’t mean that residents can’t have a little fun encouraging the people they know to sign up for alerts.”

The “little fun” is the “I Love You. Please Sign Up.” campaign and its new social networking tool to tell a friend. The “I Love You. Please Sign Up.” campaign was launched this fall and included television, radio, Internet and bus ads. The interactive make-your-own ad site, reachable from AlertSCC.com, is the newest element designed to engage the public in a fun and inventive way.

“You may have seen AlertSCC ads on the television or on buses recently. We are now expanding our outreach to include social networking because so many people use it as their primary way to keep in touch and share experiences,” said San Jose Vice Mayor Judy Chirco. “I am encouraging all county residents, especially those that live in San Jose, to go to AlertSCC.com to sign up. Click on the I Love You. Please Sign Up. link. Upload a photo and send an AlertSCC greeting card message to family members and friends.”

Research shows that observing others you know taking a specific action can be a strong motivator for you to do likewise. This is a premise behind the wildly successful social networking phenomena. The “I Love You. Please Sign Up.” television and radio commercials, and now the new interactive make-your-own-ad site are meant to be catalysts to start those conversations. Signing up for AlertSCC nd telling friends means they’re more likely to sign up.

Silicon Valley has a reputation of being forward thinking and solution oriented. In the public sector, coordination of emergency response and mutual aid is one example of this. It is appropriate that Santa Clara County now has an emergency alert system and that residents can use a social networking tool to get the word out.

“We can make the best plans for disaster mitigation, response and recovery,” said Yeager.  “But to really be effective, we have to be able to get those messages to people who might be affected.  We don’t want to rely only on landlines because the disaster might strike when you are out to dinner, or on vacation. Signing up mobile devices is the best way to ensure you’ll get these messages in a timely manner.”

By law, local governments are responsible for disaster response and the recovery their communities. Cities throughout the county are participating in AlertSCC so that both the County and its cities can send emergency notifications. At the same time, the County and cities are drilling employees on how to step up in a disaster to help with response and recovery such has mass care and shelter.

“These are things that people don’t like to think about. They like to imagine that they will never be affected by a natural disaster,” said Chirco.  “We are sure many of the people affected by Southern California wild fires, the earthquake in Haiti or the recent flooding in the Midwest thought it would never happen to them.”

Signing up at AlertSCC.com for emergency and disaster notifications is free, easy and confidential.  To follow AlertSCC on Facebook and YouTube, go to AlertSCC.com and click on the widgets.

The original story can be found here:

http://www.publicceo.com/index.php/local-governments/151-local-governments-publicceo-exclusive/1683-county-uses-novel-approach-to-influence-residents-to-sign-up-for-emergency-alert-notices

USGS Relaunches Early Warning System For Landslides

On February 9, 2010, in News, by trdehaven

MILL VALLEY, Calif. — In Oakland and on the many hillsides throughout the Bay Area, the recent heavy rains have already spawned small mudslides. 

The fear many homeowners have is larger, more dangerous slides like the one that killed a man in his Mill Valley backyard four years ago could happen in the wake of a wet winter storm season. 

“If earth starts moving all you can do is get out of the way. And do that fast,” said Ron Marinoff of Marin. 

The fear of landslides is why Daniel Chaffin said he often spends rainy days out in his yard in Marin’s Lucas Valley near San Rafael checking to see if beauty might suddenly become a beast. 

“I’m out several times with an umbrella and raincoat looking out through the gate to see what is happening,” said Chaffin. 

Chaffin — like perhaps tens of thousands of Bay Area residents who live in harm’s way of a hillside collapse — said he’d sleep better knowing there was an early-detection system for landslides. 

The U.S. Geological Survey at one time did monitor several Bay Area hills for landslides. But in 1995, the USGS ended the program due to budget cuts. 

Back then, they used old-fashioned rain gauges to measure the moisture in the hills. But now, using new federal stimulus funds, geologists at the USGS in Menlo Park are resurrecting the program. 

This time, the system will utilize high-tech landslide detection equipment. 

“We need to know how water is going into the soil during a storm. This little device is a soil-moisture sensor,” said Jonathan Stock of U.S. Geological Survey.

More at:  http://www.ktvu.com/news/22470504/detail.html

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Technology Works To Provide Early Quake Warning

On February 1, 2010, in News, by Adrienne Gizicki

Scientists can’t predict exactly when an earthquake will hit, but they are developing ways to give people up to a minute of warning before the shaking starts. New equipment can send out seismic information 5 seconds faster. For more information click here: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=123126966

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