Tornado alerts on the rise, but could too many warnings lead to alert fatigue?
With Saskatchewan experiencing an active severe weather season and more than 100 tornado warnings already issued this year, some experts are questioning whether an increasing number of alerts could make people less likely to respond when a real threat emerges.
According to the Saskatchewan Public Safety Agency (SPSA), 98 emergency alert messages had been issued in Saskatchewan through the national Alert Ready system as of June 30. Those alerts included 93 tornado warnings, three civil emergency alerts, one flash flood alert and one wildfire alert. The figure does not account for the dozens of tornado and severe weather alerts issued in the last two weeks, as storm activity has continued across much of the province.
The warnings are issued by Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) and distributed through Alert Ready, Canada’s national public alerting system. Depending on the severity and type of event, alerts can appear on cellphones, television and radio broadcasts.
Environment Canada meteorologist Kayla Bilous said broadcast-intrusive alerts, the warnings that override phone settings and emit a loud tone, are reserved for the most serious weather threats.



