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Status of Women committee  We don't issue the alerts. We give an interface. They type it in. We don't touch it. It goes in five seconds. The provincial government would say to the first nation that they can have an account and give the instances for which they can issue an alert—

March 19th, 2024Committee meeting

Kurt Eby

Status of Women committee  Because we're operating—

March 19th, 2024Committee meeting

Kurt Eby

Status of Women committee  We don't let the OPP do it. The Ontario government lets the OPP do it.

March 19th, 2024Committee meeting

Kurt Eby

Status of Women committee  Yes. I hear that. We train on how to use the technology. We're not public safety officials, so we don't train on what the threshold is for when an alert should be sent or what the content should be. Although we provide examples of what you typically put in an alert, we don't do

March 19th, 2024Committee meeting

Kurt Eby

Status of Women committee  Yes, correct.

March 19th, 2024Committee meeting

Kurt Eby

Status of Women committee  We pay for the whole system and we and we have from inception, through a condition of our broadcasting licence that is part of having The Weather Network and MétéoMédia on the basic cable package, which guarantees us access to all homes in Canada and a certain amount of fixed rev

March 19th, 2024Committee meeting

Kurt Eby

Status of Women committee  The concept of charging every first nation or every community, I think, is not the best option. You want it to be a national system with open access for all first nations and all communities. I think either the provinces or the federal government singularly would be most ideal. T

March 19th, 2024Committee meeting

Kurt Eby

Status of Women committee  Absolutely. Everyone is familiar with the amber alert. We've recently added silver alerts to the system, which is when someone with Alzheimer's, dementia or cognitive disabilities goes missing. That's been piloted in Quebec. It's really no different from that. It's another vulner

March 19th, 2024Committee meeting

Kurt Eby

Status of Women committee  I think what the previous witness has said is exactly right in terms of working with the communities. Right now, we work within the jurisdictions in Canada to issue alerts, so the federal government, primarily Environment and Climate Change Canada, and then all the provincial and

March 19th, 2024Committee meeting

Kurt Eby

Status of Women committee  Thank you. I am pleased to be here to speak with the committee about the critical issue of red dress alerts. Founded in 1989, Pelmorex is best known for The Weather Network and MétéoMédia television channels, websites and mobile apps. Indeed, we are a Canadian institution. Most

March 19th, 2024Committee meeting

Kurt Eby

Indigenous and Northern Affairs committee  Correct. I did mention that the brand name of the system is Alert Ready.

October 3rd, 2022Committee meeting

Kurt Eby

Indigenous and Northern Affairs committee  There's nothing like that. As I said, it's on TV and on radio, and there are also a number of apps that take those alerts. The Weather Network app rebroadcasts alerts in local areas, so you have to be connected to Wi-Fi and not LTE. It's a multipronged approach. Right now it's

October 3rd, 2022Committee meeting

Kurt Eby

Indigenous and Northern Affairs committee  We have not done that yet. It's something we want to pursue, but we started at the federal level. We've had some informal conversations with Public Safety Canada to say that this is something we would take on and facilitate if the challenge was having a different agency to admini

October 3rd, 2022Committee meeting

Kurt Eby

Indigenous and Northern Affairs committee  To clarify, it's not an app. It's a cell broadcast system. For weather events right now, Environment Canada issues alerts for tornadoes and severe thunderstorms. For other weather events—and I had this conversation with other colleagues of yours in British Columbia—such as floo

October 3rd, 2022Committee meeting

Kurt Eby

Indigenous and Northern Affairs committee  Thank you for the question. It's a good one. To clarify, Alberta does have some first nations that do have access to use it, but as far as I understand no other province does. The benefit is just to have the local emergency management organizations on the ground issuing the ale

October 3rd, 2022Committee meeting

Kurt Eby