Alberta Emergency Alert App slow for iPhone users during Kenow wildfire - Action News
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Alberta Emergency Alert App slow for iPhone users during Kenow wildfire

Concerns are being raised about the province promoting its emergency alert app during the Kenow wildfire, even though officials knew there were problems with the iPhone version.

It takes an average of 17 minutes for iPhone alerts to arrive, compared to 2 minutes for Android alerts

Shannon Robison, publisher of Shootin' The Breeze, a weekly newspaper serving Pincher Creek and the Crowsnest Pass, encouraged her readers to download the Alberta Emergency Alert app but says it was too slow in getting information out. (Submitted/Shannon Robison)

Concerns are being raised about the province promotingits emergency alert app during the Kenow wildfire, even though officials knew there were problems with the iPhone version.

Shannon Robison publisher of Shootin' The Breeze, a weekly paper for Pincher Creek and the Crowsnest Pass says she attended community meetings in Twin Butte and Beaver Mines where provincial officials were urging people to use the app to get the latest information. This was justdays before evacuation alerts were issued for the communities surrounding Waterton Lakes National Park.

She encouraged her subscribers and followers on social media to download anduse the app.

Now she says the province should have admitted there was a chance those alerts would be delayed when using the iPhone version in her case by 30 minutes.

"I think that would have been good for people to know in particular. This situation was a very quick evacuation," she said.

"Also, other people would have known to use multiple sources of information."

The province says it has been aware for some time the iPhone version of its Alberta Emergency Alert app has been slow to deliver.

It takes an average of about 17 minutes for iPhones to receive alerts through the app, compared to roughly two minutes for the Android version. That's because the iPhone's deliver rate is about one-third slower than the Android's push rate, according to the province.

More users than anticipated

And the rate of uptake wasmuch greater than anticipated.

The Alberta Emergency Alert app was designed in 2014 with capacity for 50,000 users. Now they have 176,000 users, and of those, about 115,000 have the iPhone version. Usage of the app has grown by about 30 per cent this year.

By comparison, the Alberta Emergency Alert system has about 214,000 followers on Facebook and Twitter, and it takes about eight to 10 seconds to reach them,said TimTrytten, team lead with the Alberta Emergency Alert program.

"It's not that [the app isn't] working, it's just not getting out there as fast as we would like it to," he said.

The app is one of 12 communication channels the province uses to get information out during emergencies, said Trytten. The others include radio, television and social media.

The province expects the problem with the appto be fixed by Oct. 1, with a target delivery rate of five minutes.

"We're going to do everything possible to meet that target," said Trytten.

With files from Colleen Underwood