OSWEGO, NY – Exelon Generation will perform a test of its public notification system on June 5 at 1 p.m.
The test will involve sounding all 40 sirens in the 10-mile radius surrounding the nuclear power plants in Scriba for three to five minutes.
Additional single-siren tests may be conducted throughout the day.
Exelon Generation tests the siren system on a monthly and bi-annual basis to ensure public safety.
Because this is only a test, no response by the public is necessary.
In an actual emergency, the sirens would sound to alert the public to tune in to a local Emergency Alert System radio or television station for information.
These stations are listed in the emergency planning brochure mailed to households and businesses in the 10-mile Emergency Planning Zone around the James A. FitzPatrick Nuclear Power Plant and Nine Mile Point Nuclear Station.
Nine Mile Point Nuclear Station is a dual-unit nuclear power facility located seven miles northeast of Oswego and 50 miles north of Syracuse.
The station can produce more than 1,937 megawatts of carbon-free electricity – enough to power nearly two million homes.
The 838-megawatt James A. FitzPatrick Nuclear Power Plant generates carbon-free electricity for more than 800,000 homes and businesses.
Discover more from Oswego County Today
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Sirens?
What for?
Nuclear power is perfectly safe.
Ask anyone in Fukushima prefecture.
Sirens?
We don’t need no steenking sirens!