watch it work
Draft a WEA public alert.
Character-validated, element-checked.
A wireless emergency alert is the highest-stakes message a PIO writes, and it has rules.
You describe the gas leak, the evacuation radius, and the shelter, and Cass drafts both lengths: the 90-character legacy text and the 360-character modern one.
Every alert carries the five elements: source, hazard, location, protective action, expiration.
Cass runs the element check on its own draft and shows you why each piece is there.
It is grounded in FEMA IPAWS guidance, and it waits for your call.
Video transcript
The recording opens on the Hey Cass home screen. The user types: "draft a WEA alert, gas leak at Harborview Middle School, evacuating a half-mile radius, shelter open at the county fairgrounds."
Cass explains the approach: evacuation WEA, half-mile zone, destination named, no-return instruction, with both the 90-character and 360-character versions, because carriers need the short one.
The 90-character legacy draft reads: GAS LEAK Harborview Middle. EVACUATE now within 1/2 mi. Go to County Fairgrounds. -HFR.
The 360-character version follows, from Harborview Fire Rescue, naming the school, the evacuation zone, the shelter destination, the road closures, and where updates will come from.
An element check lists source, hazard, location, protective action, and expiration, each mapped to the line that satisfies it, above a grounded-in citation to FEMA IPAWS guidance.
The recording ends on the Hey Cass brand card: every word, yours to approve.
your turn.
Beta is free, access is personally reviewed, and founder seats lock their rate for life.


