Michelle Kidwell
Callaway County Emergency Management Director
MichelleKidwell@cceoc.org
1201 State Road O
P O Box 817
Fulton, MO 65251
573-592-2480 (office)
573-592-0411 (fax)
All-Hazards Emergency Messages on NOAA Weather Radio
NWR broadcasts National Weather Service (NWS) warnings, watches, forecasts and other non-weather related hazard information 24 hours a day. During an emergency, NWS forecasters interrupt routine broadcasts and send a special tone activating local weather radios. Weather radios equipped with a special alarm tone feature sound an alert to give you immediate information about a life-threatening situation.
NWR broadcasts warnings and post-event information for all types of hazards: weather (e.g., tornadoes, floods), natural (e.g., earthquakes, forest fires and volcanic activity), technological (e.g., chemical releases, oil spills, nuclear power plant emergencies, etc.), and national emergencies (e.g., terrorist attacks). Working with other Federal agencies and the Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) Emergency Alert System (EAS), NWR is an all-hazards radio network, making it the most comprehensive weather and emergency information available to the public.
Life-threatening weather emergency messages are alerted on NWR. Many of those same weather-related emergency messages are also broadcast via the EAS.
Callaway County is located in the Jefferson City Emergency Alert System (EAS) Operational Area information can be obtained from the following media:
(Primary) KTXY-FM 106.9 mhz, COLUMBIA/JEFFERSON CITY
KFAL 900 AM khz – KKCA 105.5 mhz FM FULTON
KXEO 1330 AM khz / KWWR 95.7 FM mhz, MEXICO
If you are outside the Callaway County listening area, please click here to find the best radio station for your location in central Missouri.
Television Stations for this area would include:
KRCG-TV, CHANNEL 13 (CBS), JEFFERSON CITY
KMIZ-TV, CHANNEL 17 (ABC), COLUMBIA
KOMU-TV, CHANNEL 8 (NBC), COLUMBIA
KNLJ-TV, CHANNEL 25, NEW BLOOMFIELD
Non-Weather Related Emergency Messages
For non-weather emergencies, NWS activates the system at the request of local and/or state officials. NWS does not initiate the contact or the message. Local or state officials provide text information about the non-weather hazard directly to the local NWS offices. NWS offices set up agreements to speed the process, since minutes make a difference. In most areas, the local or state Office of Emergency Management or Preparedness, civil defense, police or mayor/commissioner sets up linkages to send messages on systems such as the EAS and NWR. Other references to broadcasting "all-hazards" emergency messages on NOAA Weather Radio:
- All Hazards NOAA Weather Radio (NWR fact sheet, 6/23/04)
- AMBER Alerts and the National Weather Service (NWR fact sheet, 6/23/04)
- NOAA Weather Radio brochure (NWS fact sheet, May 1999-See Page 2)
- Station locations and total number of transmitters (NOAA Website)
- Saving Lives With an All-Hazard Warning Network (Interagency website)
- Effective Disaster Warnings (A November 2000 report on public and private sector R&D capability to provide early warning of natural or technological hazards that threaten the safety of the Nation.)
To learn more about Emergency Alert System you can visit the NOAA EAS website by clicking here.