FEMA Alert and Warning Systems: Wireless Emergency Alerts and IPAWS

The federal alert and warning infrastructure represents one of the most consequential public safety systems operated under FEMA's authority, capable of reaching hundreds of millions of mobile devices within minutes of activation. This page covers the structure and legal basis of the Integrated Public Alert and Warning System (IPAWS), how Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) function as a delivery channel, the scenarios that trigger different alert types, and the decision boundaries that govern what authorities can send which messages. Understanding this system is foundational to the broader FEMA mission and core functions of protecting life before and during disasters.

Definition and scope

IPAWS is the national backbone infrastructure operated by FEMA that allows authorized public officials to send alerts simultaneously across multiple communication pathways — including the Emergency Alert System (EAS), Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA), and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Weather Radio. FEMA's legal authority to operate IPAWS derives from the Warning, Alert, and Response Network (WARN) Act of 2006 (47 U.S.C. § 1201 et seq.), which directed the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and FEMA to establish the Commercial Mobile Alert System, now branded as WEA.

WEA messages are broadcast-type transmissions, not individual text messages. Participating wireless carriers transmit alert signals over cell towers using a technology called Cell Broadcast, which means the message is delivered simultaneously to all compatible devices within a defined geographic polygon rather than to individual subscribers. This architecture eliminates network congestion problems that plague SMS-based systems during mass-casualty events, when conventional cellular networks can become overloaded within minutes.

The central FEMA resource hub provides context for how IPAWS fits within the broader emergency management framework. The system operates on three officially designated alert categories:

  1. Extreme Alerts (Presidential) — Reserved for national emergencies declared by the President. These cannot be blocked by device users and are intended for events posing existential or catastrophic national-level threats.
  2. Extreme Alerts (Non-Presidential) — Cover imminent threats to life such as tornadoes, flash floods, or active shooter events confirmed by authorized alerting authorities.
  3. AMBER Alerts — Child abduction emergency alerts meeting specific criteria established by the Department of Justice.

Severe alerts and AMBER alerts can be opted out of by device users under FCC rules (47 CFR Part 10), but Presidential alerts cannot.

How it works

Authorized alert originators — a category that includes state emergency management agencies, local governments, the National Weather Service (NWS), and law enforcement agencies that have completed FEMA's authentication process — compose and submit alerts through software that connects to the IPAWS Open Platform for Emergency Networks (IPAWS-OPEN). FEMA operates IPAWS-OPEN as the central aggregation and dissemination hub.

Once an alert is submitted, IPAWS-OPEN validates the message against the Common Alerting Protocol (CAP) standard (OASIS CAP v1.2) and routes it to the appropriate dissemination channels. For WEA specifically, the validated alert is forwarded to participating wireless carriers, who transmit it over their tower infrastructure within approximately 30 seconds of receipt under FCC performance benchmarks.

A geographic polygon drawn by the alert originator determines the delivery area. Since 2019, the FCC requires WEA messages to be geographically targeted to within one-tenth of a mile of the intended alert area (FCC Report and Order, PS Docket No. 15-91), a significant improvement over the earlier county-level targeting that frequently over-alerted large populations. WEA messages are limited to 360 characters for 4G/5G-compatible devices and carry embedded audio tones and vibration patterns designed to function as intrusion-level alerts even when a device is silenced.

Common scenarios

The alert types activated through IPAWS and WEA span a wide range of emergency conditions:

Decision boundaries

Not every emergency qualifies for WEA activation, and the decision framework involves both technical eligibility and operational judgment by the alerting authority. The key distinctions governing alert issuance are:

Threat imminence: WEA Extreme alerts require that the threat be imminent — a hazard that is forecast, probable, or anticipated but not yet immediate typically falls below the activation threshold. The NWS uses specific threat probability thresholds internally before issuing tornado or flash flood emergencies.

Geographic precision vs. over-alerting: Alerting authorities must draw polygons that correspond to the actual threatened area. Systematic over-alerting — sending WEA to populations far outside the risk zone — erodes public trust and compliance over time, a documented concern raised in FCC proceedings.

Credentialing and authorization: Only entities that have applied for and received IPAWS access through FEMA's memorandum of agreement process can originate alerts. This excludes private organizations, utilities, and unaffiliated local officials from direct IPAWS activation, regardless of the nature of the threat they observe.

WEA vs. EAS: WEA reaches mobile devices directly without requiring the recipient to be tuned to any media. EAS, by contrast, interrupts broadcast radio and television and reaches populations who lack compatible mobile devices or are in areas with weak cellular coverage. Alerting authorities and the NWS often activate both channels simultaneously for maximum reach during life-threatening events.

The FEMA preparedness resources for households section provides guidance on how individuals and communities can prepare to respond once alerts are received through IPAWS and WEA.