Aba News

May 07 - EEO Webcast June 5, 2012

Navigating the FCC's Equal Employment Opportunity Rules, presented by David Oxenford,

November 21 - Time to Renew Your 2012 Membership

The Arizona Broadcasters Association continues to work hard on your behalf to help

September 12 - AZ Hunger Campaign Action Week Sept 12 - 16

The ABA is a major partner in the AZ Hunger Campaign and today, September 12th,

Aba Events

January 01 - 2012 Membership Renewal

The Arizona Broadcasters Association continues to work hard on your behalf to help

February 02 - February ABA Board Meeting

ABA Board Meeting, Thursday - February 2nd at the ABA Office in Phoenix from 11:00

March 12 - NASBA Annual Business Meeting & State Leadership Conference

Monday, 3/12/12 - Wednesday, 3/14/12 NASBA Annual Business Meeting &

 

 

Resources

Emergency

January 13AZ AMBER Alert Expands to Facebook

Announcement Commemorates 15TH Anniversary of Abduction and Murder of 9Year Old Amber Hagerman

 

Media Contact:

Casaundra Brown, Barclay Communications - 602.346.2596 or casaundrab@barclaycomm.com

Art Brooks, Arizona Broacasters Assoc. - 602.252.4833 or abrooks@azbroadcasters.org

CLICK HERE TO PRINT PRESS RELEASE

 

PHOENIX - January 13, 2011 - Life-saving AMBER Alerts are now available to the millions of people on the social networking service Facebook, including those who live in Arizona. 

 

Effective today, Facebook users are able to sign up to receive state-specific AMBER Alert bulletins which will be sent via Facebook's "News Feed" feature.  A total of 53 new AMBER Alert Pages have been created, one for each state, Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands and the District of Columbia.  Facebook users will also be able to share the AMBER Alerts with their friends. The new AMBER Alert Facebook page for Arizona can be found at http://www.facebook.com/AMBERalertAZ.

  

 "Utilizing Facebook to update Arizona residents on AMBER Alerts is an important step in keeping our children safe," said Art Brooks, President & CEO of Arizona Broadcasters Association and Arizona AMBER Alert coordinator. "This gives us the capability to reach an even larger audience."

 

There are more than half a billion users on Facebook. The new Facebook AMBER Alert pages represent an important expansion of the national AMBER Alert program. 

 

"Everyone at Facebook feels a responsibility to help protect children and, as a former federal prosecutor and a father of two, I am particularly proud that we are now part of the AMBER Alert program," said Chris Sonderby, Facebook Lead Security and Investigations Counsel.  "Our hearts go out to the families of the missing and our gratitude goes to the officers, volunteers, and other AMBER Alert partners who work tirelessly to bring them home.  We are hopeful that today's announcement offers these dedicated officials another useful tool to find and safely recover abducted children."

 

Information about the new initiative was announced today by Facebook, the U.S. Department of Justice and the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC).  The announcement was made the day before the 15th anniversary of the abduction and murder of 9-year-old Amber Hagerman, namesake of the national AMBER Alert Program.     

 

"As the National AMBER Alert Coordinator, I am pleased to see the growth of the program's national network.  I would like to thank NCMEC and Facebook for working together to develop another way the public can join with us to bring home missing and abducted children.  We each can play our part by being aware and responsive to AMBER Alert postings that we will now see on Facebook," said Laurie O. Robinson, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Justice Programs. 

 

An estimated 800,000 children are reported missing every year.  AMBER Alert is a voluntary partnership involving law-enforcement agencies and broadcasters.  An urgent AMBER Alert bulletin is issued by law enforcement in the most serious child-abduction cases that meet specific criteria.  The goal of an AMBER Alert is to instantly galvanize the entire community to assist in the search for and safe recovery of the child.

 

"Average people doing average things but paying attention are saving lives and reuniting families," said Ernie Allen, President of NCMEC.  "With more than 500 million Facebook users this bold initiative will help us mobilize many more people and bring more missing children home."

 

 

About the AMBER Alert Program

On January 13, 1996, 9-year-old Amber Hagerman went missing while riding her bicycle in Arlington, Texas.  A neighbor heard her scream and saw a man pull her off her bike   throw her into the front seat of his pickup truck and drive away.  Local radio and television stations covered the story.  However, four days later Amber's body was found in a drainage ditch four miles away.  Her kidnapping and murder still remain unsolved.

 

Although her case has never been solved, her abduction and murder in 1996 lead to the creation of the national AMBER Alert Program.  AMBER stands for:  America's Missing Broadcast Emergency Response.  In response to Amber's abduction, the Dallas/Fort Worth Association of Radio Managers teamed up with local law-enforcement in 1997 to implement the first local AMBER Plan.  Since that time, the program has grown into a seamless network of 120 AMBER plans across the country, and has even reached into Canada, England, France, Greece, Portugal, Mexico and other countries. 

 

In 2003, Congress directed the U.S. Department of Justice to oversee the AMBER Alert program designating the Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Justice Programs as National AMBER Coordinator.  To date, the AMBER Alert program has been credited with the safe recovery of 525 children nationwide. 

 

The primary means for AMBER Alert activation is the Emergency Alert System (EAS), the broadcast system used for weather emergencies and other public emergencies.  The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) created a special code and tone for AMBER Alerts.  Once law enforcement has determined that a child has been abducted and the abduction meets AMBER Alert criteria, law enforcement notifies broadcasters and state transportation officials.   

 

To enhance and expand the reach for AMBER Alerts an AMBER Alert Secondary Distribution System has also been created.  These "secondary" alerts are reaching millions of Americans in many ways including through partnerships with Internet Service Providers, the Trucking Industry, the Wireless Industry and through the use of Digital Signage which all help distribute AMBER Alert bulletins to a geographically targeted audience.  The Justice Department has designated NCMEC to coordinate these secondary distributions.  When law enforcement activates an AMBER Alert, they also alert NCMEC, which coordinates the additional dissemination. 

 

About The Arizona Broadcasters Association & Foundation

The Arizona Broadcasters Association is a non-profit trade association serving all free over-the-air radio and television broadcast stations in Arizona since 1952.  The ABA Foundation is a non-profit charitable organization established in 2005 that supports the AZ AMBER Alert program.  To receive AZ AMBER Alert activations via e-mail or text messages, please opt-in at http://www.azamberalert.org/.  

 

###

Posted In: Resources : Emergency : AMBER Alert / Endangered Person Alerts