National Weather Service United States Department of Commerce

Record Heat for the Intermountain West and Northern Plains; Heavy Rainfall and Severe Weather Threats

Record setting heat is expected over the next several days from the Intermountain West through the northern Plains. Furthermore, fire weather concerns increase with dry and breezy conditions. Meanwhile, heavy rainfall and severe thunderstorm threats for the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys, central Appalachians and Southeast today. The threat shifts to central Gulf Coast and across central Texas this week. Read More >

--- Date of Test Rescheduled from September 20th to October 3rd ---
 
On Wednesday, October 3rd at 1:18 PM CDT, FEMA and the FCC will send a TEST Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA) message to nearly all wireless devices in the United States.
 
IMPORTANT:  This is a "Presidential Alert". You can not turn off a Presidential Alert.  You CANNOT "opt out" of the test either.
 
What This Means For You:  If your phone is turned on, within range of an active cell tower and whose wireless provider participates in WEA, the phone should be capable of receiving the message.  This means just about every phone at your work place will receive the text at 1:18 PM CDT (10/3), which will likely set off an audible alarm for a short time.
 
The message header will be "Presidential Alert".  The message text will be:  "THIS IS A TEST of the National Wireless Emergency Alert System.  No action is needed.”
 
NOTE:  The National Weather Service has nothing to do with this test.  This test will not trigger NOAA Weather Radios.
 
Again, on Wednesday, October 3rd at 1:18 PM, a "Presidential Alert" will be send to nearly all wireless devices in the United States.
 
BROADCASTERS:  At 1:20 PM CDT on the same day, an EAS test will be sent.  The EAS message will say:
 
“THIS IS A TEST of the National Emergency Alert System.  This system was developed by broadcast and cable operators in voluntary cooperation with the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Federal Communications Commission, and local authorities to keep you informed in the event of an emergency.  If this had been an actual emergency an official message would have followed the tone alert you heard at the start of this message.  A similar wireless emergency alert test message has been sent to all cell phones nationwide.  Some cell phones will receive the message; others will not.  No action is required.”
 
The link below takes you to the official FEMA information release about the test.