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Fred_Vobbe
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Amateur Radio Newsline

Post by Fred_Vobbe » 09-15-2005 08:25 AM

This weekend I'll be hosting Amateur Radio Newsline, a program about what's happening in amateur radio. The show will be released on Friday afternoon. It's program #1466

http://www.arnewsline.org

Among the stories ...

Details on how ham radio continues as a post Hurricane Katrina lifeline.

FEMA's radios fail to work during the Katrina emergency, and a Motorola employee attacks ham radio as being "next to nothing".
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Script from ARN #1466

Post by Fred_Vobbe » 09-16-2005 06:52 AM

RESCUE RADIO: KATRINA THE STORY CONTINUES

Ham radio operators continue as the communications backbone of the post hurricane Katrina rescue effort. Mark Abramovich, NT3V, is here with the latest:

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Amateur radio operators from all across the country have responded in a big way to the call for help from the Hurricane Katrina disaster zone.

The American Red Cross plea for operators - transmitted through the American Radio Relay League - drew responses by the hundreds. So many, in fact, that there's now a hold on the call for operators and a stand-by list has been assembled.

Bob Josuweit, an assistant ARRL Section Manager in Eastern Pennsylvania and CQ Magazine's Public Service editor, says hams have shown their true spirit.

"The response has been absolutely phenomenal," Josuweit says. "According to the section manager for Alabama who's helping to coordinate things in Alabama, the response has been fantastic. He has suggested that people just stand by because the need will still be there.

"He suggested monitoring the ARRL website and waiting until the next call up is posted."

And, Josuweit has suggested anyone deciding to take off on their own runs the risk of running into serious trouble with federal, state and local authorities in the states hit by Katrina.

"Some areas with martial law or the equivalent thereof, you are being stopped without proper ID and having an assigned task," Josuweit advises. "So, it's really important to work through local government or local agencies to have a plan before you go down there."

Allen Pitts, W1AGP, the ARRL's media and public relations manager, spent three days in the disaster zone at a Red Cross disaster headquarters center in Montgomery, Alabama.

The headquarters served as a clearinghouse for volunteers, including Amateur operators, who were assigned to duties in Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana.

Pitts, who just returned, gave Amateur Radio Newsline his on-the-ground perspective.

He says the operations center was set up inside a large department store. And, it's the place where hams were sent to get their assignments.

"Greg Sarratt (W4OZK), Section Manager, was talking with them, finding out their capabilities," Pitts recalls. "Most of the time, he knew they were coming; and then making making assignments based on their capabilities to where he knew the needs were.

"We were primarily working with the Red Cross which is a primary served agency in the area. And Greg was getting continuous updates of where the Red Cross was setting up shelters, food kitchens and other operations and then we would be matching people out and deploying them as quickly as we possibly could."

Pitts says he was most impressed by the care and professionalism of all involved.

"There had to be at least 400 people from the Red Cross and all that were there just processing the thousands of volunteers going on through," Pitts says. "It was absolutely huge, it was noisy, but it was organized very well and the one thing I found in this entire time while people were really frazzled, really hectic, really beat, and pushed to the limits.

"Not once, not even once did I ever hear a cross word or an argument. Everybody was trying to work together, trying to understand. And if there was disagreement, they would be working it out. OK, what's best for the people."

Pitts says the operations center kept in close contact with those who had been sent out.

"The hams were finding a number of different things," Pitts says. "Some areas were not as bad as were initially reported and other areas were absolutely destroyed.

"And so we were getting various reports from different places where some hams were saying: 'Gee,

I'm not sure what we should be doing' and other hams were saying: 'Please, send more help, send more help. I've never seen anything like this.' "

Pitts describes the volunteer hams as a diverse group with a sole purpose.

"Some of them looked at it as an adventure and that was OK," Pitts says. "But, it's an adventure in service. They also were very aware that they would see things which they had never seen before and the emotions would be running high. We kind of talked with them about that. But they were dedicated to setting things up and doing in right."

Pitts says it's clear amateur radio's role will continue to be an important one in parts of the hurricane disaster zone in the weeks ahead.

"My guess is that this is going to be going on, and this pure guess on my part, I have no better crystal ball than most people," Pitts says. "But my guess is we're probably going to need people for at least another three weeks, possibly longer."

Pitts says the media has picked up on the success of amateur radio in the aftermath of Katrina.

"There have been articles in The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, there's one that just came out in Christian Science Monitor, and all of them are basically saying the same thing that amateur radio came through when the other communications capabilities failed," Pitt says.

Now, Pitts says, it's up to those hams who are helping out in any way in the wake of Katrina to continue telling amateur radio's side of the story.

"As things start to slow down and you have time, the media is going to be looking for human interest stories, looking for people, local people that can tell the story of 'I was there' or 'I did that,' "

"And I would encourage hams all around the country who have been part of this - there's thousands of them. Go to your local paper, call your local radio station and let them know that you were there, that you were handling traffic, that you were monitoring things and then offer to talk to them about amateur radio and its capabilities."

For the Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Mark Abramowicz, NT3V, in Philadelphia.

--

Mark will continue to follow this story and will have more for you next week.

(ARNewsline)
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ARN Script #1466

Post by Fred_Vobbe » 09-16-2005 06:54 AM

RESCUE RADIO: FEMA INTEROPERABLE RADIO SYSTEM FAILS

A new interoperable FEMA radio system designed to let various emergency and relief organizations talk to one another appears to have problems that not even experienced ham radio operators can overcome. Amateur Radio Newsline’s Jack Parker, W8ISH is in Indianapolis with the people who tried hard to put it on the air:

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Indiana's Task Force One was one of the first Urban Search and Rescue teams sent into the eye of the storm. They arrived in Meridian, Mississippi as Hurricane Katrina was sweeping through the state.

Two Indianapolis amateur radio operators headed up the team's communications sector. Denny Carmichael WA9DFE and Ed Elrod W9PTO were tasked with getting the new FEMA radio system up and running. It was a mission fraught with problems.

Elrod: "We charged radios for the new Motorola radios that we have which have 160 channels preprogrammed which we cannot change or modify. We were unsuccessful in getting a repeater up that would pickup the new radios and repeat the transmission."

According to Elrod the two veteran ham radio operators tried every trick in the book to get the new repeater system up and running.

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Elrod: "We think it was a desense problem."

--

The search and rescue team tried talking simplex and found they only had about a six block range.

They wound up relying on limited cell phone service to keep contact between teams.

Elrod: "One day Nextel would be up and Cingular would be down and next day Cingular would be loud and clear and Nextel would be down. And one day we had no cell phone service at all"

Despite their limited communications the Indiana search and rescue team did have some early success with their primary mission, to save lives.

Now, back home in Indiana, Ed, Denny and the rest of Task Force One's communication team will have begun getting the new FEMA radio system ready for the next disaster. From Indianapolis, Jack Parker W8ISH

--

Meantime at least one Motorola representative seems to be rather unhappy that the hams are on site providing the communications that the professionals cant.

Jim Screeden, who runs all of Motorola's repair teams in the field for its emergency-response business is quoted in the Wall Street Journal as saying -- and we quote: "Something is better than nothing, that's right. But ham radios are pretty close to nothing." (W8ISH)
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Re: Amateur Radio Newsline

Post by Fred_Vobbe » 10-07-2005 07:12 AM

Fred_Vobbe wrote: FEMA's radios fail to work during the Katrina emergency, and a Motorola employee attacks ham radio as being "next to nothing".


RADIO RELATIONS: AN APPOLOGY FROM MOTOROLA KIND OF

A senior official of Motorola has apologized to the nations ham radio community for the negative remarks of one of his employees. This in regard to Hgurricane Katrina Amateur Radio emergency communications efforts.

In a letter to Craig Collin, AD6OD, of Tracy, California, Motorola counsel Tom Andrews claimed that the remarks of Jim Screeden appearing in the Wall Street Journal were quoted out of context. Also, that Screeden was focusing on Motorola's massive public safety recovery effort in the Gulf Coast region.

As reported in our September 16th newscast, Screeden was quoted by the Wall Street Journal as stating and we quote: "Something is better than nothing, that's right. But ham radios are pretty close to nothing."

On hearing the report AD6OD wrote a letter of complaint to Motorola's Office of Ethics and Compliance. In his response Attorney Andrews went on to say that the quoted comments do not represent Motorola's view on amateur radio and that the company apologizes for the way the words appeared in the Wall Street Journal story. He also said and we again quote:

Motorola has sent a letter of clarification and apology to the Board of Directors for the Amateur Radio Relay League. -- end quote.

Yes that's Amateur Radio Relay League his words, not ours.


(AD6OD)
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Post by Linnea » 10-07-2005 09:49 AM

Thanks for the link, Fred. This is very cool! Will check it out.

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