Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, City Council Speaker Christine
C. Quinn, and Office of Emergency Management (OEM) Commissioner Joseph F. Bruno
today announced that Notify NYC, the City’s public notification program, will
expand citywide on May 28. Notify NYC services are available by email, text
message and voice message to home, office and cellular telephones. Residents in
all five boroughs will now be able to register multiple email addresses, text
message accounts and phone numbers to receive Notify NYC advisories about events
in up to five zip codes. Alerts sent through Notify NYC will also be posted at
www.nyc.gov and distributed
to call takers at 311 and 911 to ensure that information the City provides is
accurate, timely and consistent. New Yorkers who participated in the pilot
program will automatically receive a message on May 28 reminding them to enroll
in the expanded Notify NYC, New Yorkers who want to pre-register for Notify NYC
before the May 28th expansion can do so at www.nyc.gov. The Mayor and the Speaker were joined at the
announcement by Council Members Gale Brewer, Alan Gerson, Eric Ulrich, James Vacca, and Peter Vallone, Jr.
“Starting on May 28th anyone will be able to sign up for
neighborhood-specific emergency alerts on their cell phone, email, or home
landline,” said Mayor Bloomberg. “You can be just about anywhere and receive
instantaneous information about events of concern in your community, or any
other area of the City. Many New Yorkers have this technology in their pockets,
and I’m glad that their government can now supply them with timely emergency
information.”
“One of the most basic ways we can make government more effective is to
utilize every method at our disposal to get information out to New Yorkers
during an emergency,” said Speaker Christine C. Quinn. “Whether we’re
talking about power outages or other emergency situations, Notify NYC will allow
people to make the best decision based on up to the minute
alerts.”
Participants in Notify NYC will receive emergency alerts, which provide
critical information about the most severe emergency events, such as AMBER
Alerts and natural disasters. Subscribers will also have the option of
registering for Significant Event Notifications, which provide informational
advisories about less-severe emergency events which may still cause disruptions
on a localized basis. Examples of less-severe events are brush fires, extended
disruptions of mass transit services and major utility outages affecting water,
power and telecommunications. The City will work with utility providers when
major outages occur, and provide the public with updates about how and when
services will be restored. Another optional category will be Public Health
Notifications.
The citywide program will also offer non-emergency advisories about
unscheduled suspensions of alternate side parking rules and public school
closures and delays. Based on feedback from subscribers in the pilot, Notify NYC
will expand to offer users additional non-emergency information services from a
variety of City agencies. Notify
NYC messages will be crafted by a team of Public
Notification Specialists in OEM’s 24-hour Watch
Command. The
Public Notification Specialists will coordinate with Operations
Centers and field Incident Commanders from the City’s first response agencies to
ensure the accuracy of messages.
Notify NYC is the product of a multi-year initiative to enhance the
City’s emergency public communication systems. Under the direction of Deputy
Mayor for Operations Edward Skyler, the City has upgraded to the Emergency Alert
System (EAS), developed by the City’s Emergency Television and Radio (ETVR)
briefing sites and implemented the Emergency Public Information Plan (EPIP),
which is managed by OEM to improve the coordination of public information during
major emergencies. Building on the success of 3-1-1 and nyc.gov, Notify NYC will
integrate information and technology services for multiple City agencies, and
provide the public with a one-stop destination for emergency and non-emergency
notifications.
“We are building on the success of our existing pilot program to bring
New Yorkers even more services and communication tools,” said Deputy Mayor
Skyler. “New Yorkers have asked for this capability, and government is pleased
to provide it. To get here, we have performed years of testing and research and
development, and have worked with many our partners in the public and private
sector to develop a program plan that responds to the unique challenges New York
City presents.”
“OEM is the City’s clearinghouse for information about emergencies and
with the expansion of Notify NYC people in all five boroughs will have access to
the information we collect about incidents that affect the neighborhoods where
they live and work,” said OEM Commissioner Joseph F.
Bruno.
“Notify NYC has given residents who live in the four pilot neighborhoods
good information regarding emergencies,” said Committee on Technology in
Government Chair Gale A. Brewer. “Most importantly, the emails, texts, and phone
calls emanating from Office of Emergency Management produce accurate information
and dispel rumors. This cutting edge program is now ready to be available in all
City zip codes. I urge New Yorkers to sign up, and I congratulate the Mayor’s
office for the successes that have lead to the expansion.”
“Notify NYC has become an indispensable part of the Lower Manhattan communications network, providing critical
information and reassurance,” said Council Member Alan Gerson. “I’m confident
that this expansion of the system will do the same for the entire
City.”
“When a major emergency or service outage strikes, getting reliable,
up-to-the-minute information out to the public makes a huge difference,” said
Fire and Criminal Justice Services Chair James Vacca, who served as District
Manager of Board 10 for 26 years. “In the year and a half Notify NYC has
operated as a pilot program in Bronx Community Board 10, it has been an
effective tool for getting the word out about incidents ranging from street
closures to severe weather. I encourage all New Yorkers to sign up and I look
forward to working with the Administration to promote this service in
communities across the City.”
“An informed public is a safer public, and today we go a long way towards
that,” said Public Safety Committee Chair Peter Vallone, Jr.
Notify NYC is a voluntary program.
Phone numbers, email addresses and other personal information collected
during the registration process will never be used for purposes other than
sending Notify NYC messages and will remain confidential. For more information about Notify NYC or
to register, visit www.nyc.gov. People who do not have regular access to email or text
messaging may also register exclusively for voice alerts to their home, office
or cell phones by calling 3-1-1 and using the automated phone registration
system.
Notify NYC Began as a Pilot
Program
Notify NYC was first launched on a limited basis in
December 2007, offering participants in four pilot areas - Lower Manhattan, the
Northeast Bronx, the Rockaways and Southwest Staten
Island - the ability to register for alerts and notifications about
significant events in their communities. Since the initial four-area pilot
program began, OEM has already sent more than 70 emergency notifications and
alerts to over 12,800 subscribers.
All of the pilot program
subscribers will automatically receive a message reminding them to enroll in the
new citywide Notify NYC program. While pilot program subscribers will continue
to receive messages from Notify NYC up to the May 28th citywide launch, new
registrations for the four pilot neighborhoods will close on May 22nd. There are
another 2,500 New Yorkers who don’t live in a Notify NYC pilot neighborhood that
have already pre-registered for the citywide program. On the May 28th launch day,
pre-registrants will receive an email taking them through the registration
process.
Data from the citywide pilot are being used to
evaluate the efficiency and effectiveness of different types of notification
technologies, and the value of different types of emergency and non-emergency
advisory services to residents, commuters and visitors. During the initial
four-area pilot program, participants provided valuable feedback through
surveys, customer service emails and calls to 3-1-1. This feedback has driven
development of the citywide pilot program as well as a Request for Proposals
(RFP), which will be released today with requirements for the next phase of
Notify NYC citywide services.
Notify NYC Strengthens Public Communication and
Reduces Needless Anxiety
The citywide expansion of Notify NYC services is a
central component of the City’s implementation of a recommendation from the
World Trade Center Health Panel Report, which proposed the City improve the
delivery of environmental health information during emergencies.
Notify NYC is the result of a collaborative effort by the Mayor’s Office,
the Office of Emergency Management (OEM), the Department of Information, Technology and
Telecommunications (DOITT) and the City's public safety
and health agencies including Police (NYPD), Fire (FDNY), Health and Mental Hygiene
(DOHMH), Environmental Protection
(DEP),
Sanitation (DSNY), Transportation (DOT) and Buildings (DOB).