Goto Section: 11.47 | 11.52 | Table of Contents
FCC 11.51
Revised as of
Goto Year:1996 |
1998
Sec. 11.51 EAS code and Attention Signal Transmission requirements.
(a) Broadcast stations must transmit, either automatically or
manually, national level EAS messages and required tests by sending the
EAS header codes, Attention Signal, emergency message and End of Message
(EOM) using the EAS Protocol. The Attention Signal must precede any
emergency audio message. After January 1, 1998, the shortened Attention
Signal may only be used as an audio alert signal and the EAS codes will
become the minimum signalling requirement for National level messages
and tests.
(b) Broadcast stations may transmit only the EAS header codes and
the EOM code without the Attention Signal and emergency message for
State and local emergencies. Television stations and cable systems
should ensure that pauses in video programming before EAS message
transmission do not cause television receivers to mute EAS audio
messages. No Attention Signal is warranted for EAS messages that do not
contain audio programming, such as a Required Weekly Test.
(c) Effective January 1, 1997, all radio and television stations
shall transmit EAS messages in the main audio channel.
(d) By the above date, television stations shall transmit a visual
message containing the Originator, Event, Location and the valid time
period of an EAS message. If the message is a video crawl, it shall be
displayed at the top of the television screen or where it will not
interfere with other visual messages.
(e) Class D non-commercial educational FM stations as defined in
Sec. 73.506 of this chapter and low power TV stations as defined in
Sec. 74.701(f) of this chapter are not required to have equipment
capable of generating the EAS codes and Attention Signal specified in
Sec. 11.31.
(f) Broadcast stations are responsible for ensuring that the
equipment for generating the EAS codes and the Attention Signal shall
modulate a broadcast station transmitter so that the signal broadcast to
other broadcast stations and cable systems alerts them that the EAS is
being activated or tested at the National, State or Local Area level.
The minimum level of modulation for EAS codes, measured at peak
modulation levels using the internal calibration output specified in
Sec. 11.32(a)(4) shall modulate the transmitter at no less than 80% of
full channel modulation limits. Measured at peak modulation levels, each
of the Attention Signal tones shall be calibrated separately to modulate
the transmitter at no less than 40%. These two calibrated modulation
levels shall have values that are within 1 dB of each other.
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(g) Effective July 1, 1997, cable systems shall transmit EAS audio
messages in the same order specified in paragraph (a) of this section.
The Attention Signal may be produced from a storage device.
Additionally, subject cable systems must:
(1) Install, operate, and maintain equipment capable of generating
the EAS codes. The modulation levels for the EAS codes and Attention
Signal for cable systems shall comply with the aural signal requirements
in Sec. 76.605 of this chapter. This will provide sufficient signal
levels to operate cable subscriber television or radio receivers
equipped with EAS decoders and to audibly alert subscribers.
(2) Provide a video interruption and an audio EAS message on all
channels. The audio message must state which channel is carrying the
visual EAS message.
(3) Subject cable systems shall transmit a visual EAS message on at
least one channel. The message shall contain the Originator, Event,
Location and the valid time period of the EAS message. If the visual
message is a video crawl, it shall be displayed at the top of the
subscriber's television screen or where it will not interfere with other
visual messages.
(4) Cable systems shall provide a method to alert hearing impaired
or deaf subscribers to EAS messages. Methods may include: a box that
displays EAS messages and activates other alerting mechanisms or lights;
visual messages on all channels; etc.
(5) Cable systems may elect not to interrupt EAS messages from
broadcast stations based on a written agreement between all concerned.
(h) If manual interrupt is used as specified in paragraph (l) of
this section, EAS Encoders must be located so that station or cable
staff, at normal duty locations, can initiate the EAS code and Attention
Signal transmission.
(i) Broadcast stations or cable systems that are co-owned and co-
located with a combined studio or control facility (such as an AM and FM
licensed to the same entity and at the same location or a cable headend
serving more than one system) may provide the EAS transmitting
requirements contained in this section for the combined station or cable
system with one EAS Encoder. The requirements of Sec. 11.32 must be met
for both the broadcast station and cable system.
(j) Broadcast stations and cable systems are required to transmit
all received EAS messages in which the header code contains the Event
codes for Emergency Action Notification (EAN), Emergency Action
Termination (EAT), and Required Monthly Test (RMT), with the
accompanying location codes for their State and State/county. These EAS
messages shall be retransmitted unchanged except for the LLLLLLLL- code
which identifies the broadcast station or cable system retransmitting
the message. See Sec. 11.31(c). If an EAS source originates any EAS
messages with the above Event codes, it must include the location codes
for the State and counties in its service area. When transmitting the
required weekly test, broadcast stations and subject cable systems will
use the event code RWT. The location codes will be the state and county
for the broadcast station city of license or subject cable system
community. Other location codes may be included upon approval of station
or cable system management approval. EAS code requirements and examples
are provided in the EAS Operating Handbook. Operations may be conducted
automatically or manually.
(1) Automatic interrupt of programming and transmission of EAS
messages is required when facilities are unattended and must include a
permanent record that contains at a minimum the following information:
Originator, Event, Location and valid time period of the message. The
decoder performs the functions necessary to determine which EAS messages
are automatically transmitted by the encoder.
(2) Manual interrupt of programming and transmission of EAS messages
may be used. EAS messages with the EAN and EAT Event codes must be
transmitted immediately and Monthly EAS test messages within 15 minutes.
All actions must be logged or recorded.
(k) Broadcast stations and cable systems may employ a minimum delay
feature, not to exceed 15 minutes, for automatic interrupt of EAS codes
but
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not for the EAN Event which must be transmitted immediately.
(l) Either manual or automatic operation of EAS equipment may be
used at broadcast stations or cable systems that use remote control. If
manual operation is used, an EAS decoder must be located at the remote
control location and directly monitor the signals of the two assigned
EAS sources. If direct monitoring of the assigned EAS sources is not
possible at the remote location, automatic operation is required. If
automatic operation is used, the remote control location may be used to
override the transmission of an EAS message. Broadcast stations and
cable systems may change back and forth between automatic and manual
operation.
[ 59 FR 67092 , Dec. 28, 1994, as amended at 60 FR 56000 , Nov. 6, 1995]
Goto Section: 11.47 | 11.52
Goto Year: 1996 |
1998
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