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Watching the news that Japan woke up to the sound of air raid sirens when NKorea recently launched a missile....I wondered if we have them in Canada. By the looks of it, only a few are left.
So....how does the government warns the populace if ever an attack occurs, through text?
https://oaem.ca/tag/air-raid-sirens/A bit of research and I found out that most were removed by the Department of National Defence (DND) back in the 1970s because they were rusting and becoming eyesores. The Federal Government had no money to maintain them. These sirens had been installed back in the 50s as part of the cold war effort to be prepared for air raids.
Those sirens would give about twenty minutes advanced warning for people to take shelter in case of an enemy attack.
Apparently there are a few left, some web sites show two in Toronto and a few in BC. DND admitted in an interview to the Toronto Star in 2007, that some may have been missed from the inventory. In fact, there was controversy as to who actually owned them. The Star called the City of Toronto, who referred them to the Province, who referred them to DND, who referred them back to the City of Toronto.
There was a time when the sirens made sense and the investment was justified. Times change however, and technology advances require us to constantly revisit the premise upon which we made a decision. In emergency management, much has changed as well. I started my emergency management career by having to pull out the emergency plan once a year, turn to the telephone list, and call everyone to make sure the phone numbers were still valid. Back then a blackberry was a fruit, a cell was a living organism, and a network was a social organization.
So....how does the government warns the populace if ever an attack occurs, through text?