@caseynewton I dunno if that's fair. As an emergency services person, it's not like we have much of a choice. Changing how we do public alerting and messaging is not something we can do overnight, and for good reason.
My grad school capstone was on social media use in the emerg mgmt world and unsurprisingly agencies are extremely under-resourced when it comes to social media comms. Relying on them to lead vs follow best practices and trends is unrealistic imho.
@caseynewton Many agencies have spent time in recent months informing their audience about other places they can receive messages
but we can't just stop posting on twitter overnight, that has immediate real world consequences to the people that do still rely on that vector for information
in the world of life safety, you have to be conservative about your decision making... I think expecting us to abandon a platform in protest is not actually the kind of behavior you want from emerg svcs
@caseynewton sure but even if I think public comms are just as essential as a fire truck, I'm not the one you have to convince
priorities are instantiated by funding and the money comes from elected officials... you gotta convince them first
it's not like we're not having that fight, but we don't have many resources to fight it successfully
@caseynewton I'm not saying you're wrong, I just think the reality of how decisions get made at public agencies doesn't line up with your expectations
we don't need criticism, we need resources and support to do the right thing