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Emergency alert Day 2 testing going ahead while officials work to fix Monday failures

WATCH ABOVE: A test of Canada's new public emergency alert system in 10 more provinces and territories found more bugs. On Monday, not all LTE smartphone users got the alarms in Ontario and Quebec. And as Reid Fiest reports, it was a similar story on Wednesday – May 9, 2018

UPDATE: Manitoban politicians blamed service providers for the glitches.

OTTAWA – Mobile phones in Atlantic Canada buzzed and squealed Wednesday as more tests were conducted on Canada’s new emergency alert system, but glitches appeared to continue in Western Canada, where some wireless subscribers got the test signals and others did not.

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The operators of the system said they were learning from the failed tests earlier this week in Ontario and Quebec, although they still could not say what caused problems in Ontario on Monday.

“Alert Ready partners have been actively working to resolve identified issues,” officials said prior to Wednesday’s round of testing in eight provinces and two territories. Tests were not conducted in Nunavut.

Round Two of testing seemed to start off without problems.

READ MORE: Canadians to receive mobile emergency alert test this week: Here’s what to know

“During the tests in Atlantic Canada the wireless carriers … confirmed that test messages were distributed across their networks,” Pelmorex, the company that operates the system, said in a statement.

But anecdotal reports on social media later began to appear suggesting all might not be working as emergency officials had hoped in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba.

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“Did not get the alert,” Rae Cardiff wrote on Twitter. “In Calgary on Telus network.”

“No alert here in Saskatchewan,” Cam Lee tweeted.

LISTEN: Why aren’t all mobiles receiving alerts?

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Some smart phones users in B.C. didn’t receive alerts either, but Ian Lightbody with Emergency Management BC said it’s unclear why.

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“It doesn’t seem to be any consistent thread or theme in the phones that didn’t get the alert. It wasn’t a consistent carrier or it wasn’t a phone type or a software type,” he said.

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Emergency Management BC will work with Pelmorex and wireless carriers across the province to fix the issue, Lightbody said.

WATCH: Cellphones and other devices will be buzzing a little more than normal Wednesday afternoon, when the new national public alert system is tested in Alberta. Kent Morrison has the details. 

READ MORE: No alerts for cell phone emergency alert system test in Quebec

While Pelmorex operates what’s called the National Alert Aggregation and Dissemination (NAAD) System, it pointed to wireless and other service providers as the final layer in the multi-partner emergency messaging service.

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“TV, radio, cable, satellite and wireless providers are the ‘last mile’ distributors,” the company said.

“It is their role to deliver alert messages directly to Canadians.”

While wireless service providers were working to verify the handset reception success rate for devices across the country, Pelmorex also said the new system is in its infancy and not all wireless devices are compatible to receive messages from Alert Ready.

A lot depends on the handsets used and the software versions of the devices, company officials said in a statement.

Mobile users in Ontario and Quebec were supposed to receive alerts on their devices Monday as part of a test of the regulator-mandated warning system, which was supposed to be fully in place by April 6.

No alerts were registered on devices in Quebec, while only some mobile subscribers in Ontario received the signal.

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System operators blamed the Quebec malfunction on a computer coding error and were still investigating what went wrong in Ontario.

Test signals did sound on radio and TV stations Wednesday in provinces and territories outside of Ontario and Quebec, except Nunavut.

The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ordered wireless providers to implement the system to distribute warnings of imminent safety threats, such as tornadoes, floods, Amber Alerts or terrorism.

Watch below: Just before 2 p.m. Wednesday, most cell users in Alberta were supposed to get the same message: a test of the new national public alert system. But as Kim Smith reports, not everyone received it.

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