Emergency notification systems require resident participation

Listed below are county, police, school, university and village notification systems

By Paula Pyzik Scott

When the Village of Ada made an emergency announcement regarding drinking water on January 16, the Village alert system notified subscribers by email and, a little later that evening, the Ada Police Department notified its subscribers via the Nixle System. (See Council meeting includes timeline of Jan. 16-17 water emergency)

Such emergencies are rare, but when they happen, are local communities ready to notify residents? And are local residents ready to receive notifications?

Notification systems only work when residents are aware of them and choose to subscribe.

Several agencies are involved in providing alert messages for the following types of incidents and conditions:

  • Boil water and other water system notices
  • Road closures
  • Hazardous material release or risk involving truck, rail tank, storage tank or pipeline accidents
  • Fire or explosion
  • Air, train, bus or vehicle accidents
  • Weather emergencies and natural disasters
  • Criminal activities, scams, manhunts

With any system, there will always be people who are distracted or disengaged. Remember to share emergency notifications with friends, neighbors and family members. It’s always a good idea.

Village of Ada 
Public notices, water advisories, bids, projects, meetings

Ada Police Department
Community safety alerts only

Hardin County Sheriff
Weather, road conditions, closures, scams, criminal activity

Ada Exempted Village Schools
School delays, cancellations, event updates, announcements

Ohio Northern University
Community messages are shared via Facebook, Instagram, Threads and X

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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