Recently, there have been several emergency or near emergency situations in Newtown Township. On March 7, 2018, during a snow emergency power failure, the Township Building was open as a “warming center,” but before any township residents were made aware of this, power was restored; on October 24, 2018, Swamp Road and Route 413 experienced significant traffic delays due to an accident, but many residents were unaware of the problem; during the "surprise" November 15, 2018, snow storm, almost all major roads in the Township were inhibited in one way or another throughout the day by volume and stuck vehicles. Again, residents were not adequately notified until it was too late.
The list goes on. And although the Newtown Police Department and/or the Township Manager were able to post information about some of these events on Twitter and Facebook or via email to homeowner association management companies (with the hope that the messages would passed along to resident members), these notices reached a limited number of residents, reached them too late, or never reached them at all.
The Newtown Technology Committee has been investigating services that can solve these problems by sending notices to residents about active shooters, traffic incidents, community events, severe weather alerts, missing persons, etc., via text, mobile apps, email, voice, Twitter, and Facebook (depending on personal preferences). The system recommended by the Committee is Nixle, which is used by over 8,000 communities across the country. For more information download the Nixle data sheet and listen to an edited recording of a presentation to the Newtown Technology Committee made by a Nixle sales representative. It covers all the major features of the system.
Such a service would cost Newtown Township about $5,500 per year (plus an additional $500 for training in the first year). The service is FREE to residents who sign up (opt-in) to use it. Is it worth it?
Recently, I spoke with the Chief of a Regional Police Department that uses Nixle. According to him, "Nixle has been working very well for us. We purchased this service and permit the three municipalities in the region to also post notices/alerts through our system. All officers can post an alert. The system is very easy to use, especially the mobile application. I have already used Nixle's mobile app from my car while traveling to the scene of an event."
Citizens and residents from surrounding municipalities can opt in to receive mobile, email or hard line phone notifications. His department created information cards and officers hand them out at community events to make people aware of the system.
"I would say that Nixle is a benefit and cost appropriate," said the Chief.
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