From BillLennox@aol.com Tue Sep 16 17:43:00 2003
From: BillLennox@aol.com (BillLennox@aol.com)
Date: Tue, 16 Sep 2003 12:43:00 EDT
Subject: [Ares-races] Court kicks New York ham's "police radio"case
Message-ID: <17c.20641d3c.2c989794@aol.com>
From: htt=
p://www.arrl.org/news/stories/2003/09/10/3/?nc=3D1
Court kicks New York ham's "police radio"case: A New York court has=20
dismissed a misdemeanor charge against ARRL member Richard C. "Dick" Lalone,=
=20
KC5GAX, for violating =A7397of that state's Vehicle and Traffic Law. That se=
ction=20
prohibits individuals other than law officers from equipping their vehicles=20
with radios "capable of receiving signals on the frequencies allocated for=20
police use" without first securing a permit. The section, which also prohibi=
ts=20
knowingly interfering with police transmissions, contains an explicit exempt=
ion=20
for "any person who holds a valid amateur radio operator's license . . . and=
who=20
operates a duly licensed portable mobile transmitter and in connection=20
therewith a receiver or receiving set on frequencies exclusively allocated .=
. . to=20
duly licensed radio amateurs."=20
In his nearly 1300-word decision, Judge John J. Hallet called=20
=A7397"probably the most poorly drafted section of the Vehicle and Traffic L=
aw. "While=20
noting that the rationale behind the statute was to keep criminals from=20
monitoring police calls, he said it was clear the legislature never intended=
the=20
provisions of =A7397 from applying to licensed Amateur Radio operators, and=20=
he=20
dismissed the charge August 5.=20
Susan Terry, KF4SUE, a former New York assistant attorney general,=20
represented Lalone. ARRL President Jim Haynie,W5JBP, ARRL General Counsel Ch=
ris=20
Imlay, W3KD, and ARRL Regulatory Information Specialist John Hennessee, N1KB=
,=20
provided advice or assistance to Lalone.
////////////////////////////////////////////////// Last Item=20
/////////////////////////////////////////////////
Bill Lennox
US Air Force (Retired)
Full Time College Student (Emergency Management)
KD7EFP
Assistant Emergency Coordinator - Plans (ARES), Washington County, Oregon
Assistant Radio Officer - Plans (RACES), Washington County, Oregon
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From BillLennox@aol.com Tue Sep 16 17:43:04 2003
From: BillLennox@aol.com (BillLennox@aol.com)
Date: Tue, 16 Sep 2003 12:43:04 EDT
Subject: [Ares-races] Grant Renewed for Ham Radio Emergency Communication Training
Message-ID: <1a6.19f9adbc.2c989798@aol.com>
From: http://www2.arrl.org/news/stories/2003/09/10/1/?nc=1
CNCS Renews Grant for Emergency Communication Courses
Hams across the US will continue to receive emergency communications
training with 100% reimbursed tuition via a grant from the Corporation for
National and Community Service (CNCS), which extended its grant to ARRL for
another year on September 4.
ARRL provides grant-funded tuition reimbursement for US Amateur Radio
operators wishing to receive emergency communication training through ARRL's
Certification and Continuing Education program. The second year of
reimbursement can cover the tuition expense of almost 1700 amateurs looking to take the
Level 1 ARECC course.
In 2002, ARRL proposed to CNCS that the League could greatly expand
its emergency communication training program with grant funding.The training is
supported by a three-year, $540,000 federal homeland security grant from CNCS.
The League was among several dozen nonprofit organizations designated to
receive some $10.3 million in federal money to boost homeland defense volunteer
programs. Through August 2003--the end of the first year of the grant--2254
emergency communication volunteers started the Level I course through the
grant-funded program, and 1699 completed the training, a 75.4%completion rate.
"A good number of people have told us that without the grant, they
would not have participated in the training," said ARRL Emergency Communications
Course Manager Dan Miller, K3UFG. "The CNCS grant is doing exactly what it was
intended to do: provide a larger group of trained emergency communications
people able to support a number of official agencies in a time of need."
The Corporation for National and Community Service provides
opportunities for all Americans to serve their communities and country through Senior
Corps, AmeriCorps, and Learn and Serve America. Members and volunteers serve
with national and community nonprofit organizations, and local agencies to help
meet community needs in education, the environment, public safety, homeland
security and other critical areas.
"Introduction to Amateur Radio Emergency Communication" is a basic
Amateur Radio Emergency Communication course (ARECC) to raise awareness and
provide practical knowledge for amateur emergency communication volunteers.
The course includes basic message handling, equipment and use, the
incident command structure, and operations and logistics, among other topics.
This course has 20 lesson units and takes about 25 hours to complete over an
8-week period; there are also intermediate and advanced courses available for
further study and training. Continuing education units are also available.
ARRL Presents August Emergency Communications Course Seminars
In August, Miller gave seminars to folks interested ingrant-funded
emergency communication courses at hamfests in Huntsville, Alabama and Columbia,
Missouri.
WHAT THEY'RE SAYING:
"This has been a great educational opportunity for me; I have learned
enormously about aspects of emergency communications that I never knew before.
Yesterday I attended a regional VOAD meeting with my SEC; last month I didn't
even know VOAD existed! Last month I learned how trunked radio operates; not
only that, I learned it's vulnerability to overloads in a disaster. This
course has taken me WAY beyond showing up with a radio in my hand." -- Mike
Jaquish, W4WJH"
Very informative especially regarding what systems have been set up
over the years to facilitate EmComms. Quite an eye opener as to the versatility,
creativeness and ingenuity that ham radio operators demonstrate in emergency
operations. Thank you for the opportunity to continue my ham education and for
the skills that I've developed as a result of this course." -- Marti Brown,
KF4TRG* ** * *
For more information on this exciting opportunity for learning and
service, check out the ARRL Certification and Education Web pages or send e-mail
to ARRL Emergency Communications Course Manager Dan Miller, K3UFG.
////////////////////////////////////////////////// Last Item
/////////////////////////////////////////////////
Bill Lennox
US Air Force (Retired)
Full Time College Student (Emergency Management)
KD7EFP
Assistant Emergency Coordinator - Plans (ARES), Washington County, Oregon
Assistant Radio Officer - Plans (RACES), Washington County, Oregon
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From BillLennox@aol.com Tue Sep 16 17:43:04 2003
From: BillLennox@aol.com (BillLennox@aol.com)
Date: Tue, 16 Sep 2003 12:43:04 EDT
Subject: [Ares-races] Grant Renewed for Ham Radio Emergency Communication Training
Message-ID: <1a6.19f9adbc.2c989798@aol.com>
From: http://www2.arrl.org/news/stories/2003/09/10/1/?nc=1
CNCS Renews Grant for Emergency Communication Courses
Hams across the US will continue to receive emergency communications
training with 100% reimbursed tuition via a grant from the Corporation for
National and Community Service (CNCS), which extended its grant to ARRL for
another year on September 4.
ARRL provides grant-funded tuition reimbursement for US Amateur Radio
operators wishing to receive emergency communication training through ARRL's
Certification and Continuing Education program. The second year of
reimbursement can cover the tuition expense of almost 1700 amateurs looking to take the
Level 1 ARECC course.
In 2002, ARRL proposed to CNCS that the League could greatly expand
its emergency communication training program with grant funding.The training is
supported by a three-year, $540,000 federal homeland security grant from CNCS.
The League was among several dozen nonprofit organizations designated to
receive some $10.3 million in federal money to boost homeland defense volunteer
programs. Through August 2003--the end of the first year of the grant--2254
emergency communication volunteers started the Level I course through the
grant-funded program, and 1699 completed the training, a 75.4%completion rate.
"A good number of people have told us that without the grant, they
would not have participated in the training," said ARRL Emergency Communications
Course Manager Dan Miller, K3UFG. "The CNCS grant is doing exactly what it was
intended to do: provide a larger group of trained emergency communications
people able to support a number of official agencies in a time of need."
The Corporation for National and Community Service provides
opportunities for all Americans to serve their communities and country through Senior
Corps, AmeriCorps, and Learn and Serve America. Members and volunteers serve
with national and community nonprofit organizations, and local agencies to help
meet community needs in education, the environment, public safety, homeland
security and other critical areas.
"Introduction to Amateur Radio Emergency Communication" is a basic
Amateur Radio Emergency Communication course (ARECC) to raise awareness and
provide practical knowledge for amateur emergency communication volunteers.
The course includes basic message handling, equipment and use, the
incident command structure, and operations and logistics, among other topics.
This course has 20 lesson units and takes about 25 hours to complete over an
8-week period; there are also intermediate and advanced courses available for
further study and training. Continuing education units are also available.
ARRL Presents August Emergency Communications Course Seminars
In August, Miller gave seminars to folks interested ingrant-funded
emergency communication courses at hamfests in Huntsville, Alabama and Columbia,
Missouri.
WHAT THEY'RE SAYING:
"This has been a great educational opportunity for me; I have learned
enormously about aspects of emergency communications that I never knew before.
Yesterday I attended a regional VOAD meeting with my SEC; last month I didn't
even know VOAD existed! Last month I learned how trunked radio operates; not
only that, I learned it's vulnerability to overloads in a disaster. This
course has taken me WAY beyond showing up with a radio in my hand." -- Mike
Jaquish, W4WJH"
Very informative especially regarding what systems have been set up
over the years to facilitate EmComms. Quite an eye opener as to the versatility,
creativeness and ingenuity that ham radio operators demonstrate in emergency
operations. Thank you for the opportunity to continue my ham education and for
the skills that I've developed as a result of this course." -- Marti Brown,
KF4TRG* ** * *
For more information on this exciting opportunity for learning and
service, check out the ARRL Certification and Education Web pages or send e-mail
to ARRL Emergency Communications Course Manager Dan Miller, K3UFG.
////////////////////////////////////////////////// Last Item
/////////////////////////////////////////////////
Bill Lennox
US Air Force (Retired)
Full Time College Student (Emergency Management)
KD7EFP
Assistant Emergency Coordinator - Plans (ARES), Washington County, Oregon
Assistant Radio Officer - Plans (RACES), Washington County, Oregon
--- StripMime Report -- processed MIME parts ---
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The reason this message is shown is because the post was in HTML
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From BillLennox@aol.com Tue Sep 16 17:43:04 2003
From: BillLennox@aol.com (BillLennox@aol.com)
Date: Tue, 16 Sep 2003 12:43:04 EDT
Subject: [Ares-races] Grant Renewed for Ham Radio Emergency Communication Training
Message-ID: <1a6.19f9adbc.2c989798@aol.com>
From: http://www2.arrl.org/news/stories/2003/09/10/1/?nc=1
CNCS Renews Grant for Emergency Communication Courses
Hams across the US will continue to receive emergency communications
training with 100% reimbursed tuition via a grant from the Corporation for
National and Community Service (CNCS), which extended its grant to ARRL for
another year on September 4.
ARRL provides grant-funded tuition reimbursement for US Amateur Radio
operators wishing to receive emergency communication training through ARRL's
Certification and Continuing Education program. The second year of
reimbursement can cover the tuition expense of almost 1700 amateurs looking to take the
Level 1 ARECC course.
In 2002, ARRL proposed to CNCS that the League could greatly expand
its emergency communication training program with grant funding.The training is
supported by a three-year, $540,000 federal homeland security grant from CNCS.
The League was among several dozen nonprofit organizations designated to
receive some $10.3 million in federal money to boost homeland defense volunteer
programs. Through August 2003--the end of the first year of the grant--2254
emergency communication volunteers started the Level I course through the
grant-funded program, and 1699 completed the training, a 75.4%completion rate.
"A good number of people have told us that without the grant, they
would not have participated in the training," said ARRL Emergency Communications
Course Manager Dan Miller, K3UFG. "The CNCS grant is doing exactly what it was
intended to do: provide a larger group of trained emergency communications
people able to support a number of official agencies in a time of need."
The Corporation for National and Community Service provides
opportunities for all Americans to serve their communities and country through Senior
Corps, AmeriCorps, and Learn and Serve America. Members and volunteers serve
with national and community nonprofit organizations, and local agencies to help
meet community needs in education, the environment, public safety, homeland
security and other critical areas.
"Introduction to Amateur Radio Emergency Communication" is a basic
Amateur Radio Emergency Communication course (ARECC) to raise awareness and
provide practical knowledge for amateur emergency communication volunteers.
The course includes basic message handling, equipment and use, the
incident command structure, and operations and logistics, among other topics.
This course has 20 lesson units and takes about 25 hours to complete over an
8-week period; there are also intermediate and advanced courses available for
further study and training. Continuing education units are also available.
ARRL Presents August Emergency Communications Course Seminars
In August, Miller gave seminars to folks interested ingrant-funded
emergency communication courses at hamfests in Huntsville, Alabama and Columbia,
Missouri.
WHAT THEY'RE SAYING:
"This has been a great educational opportunity for me; I have learned
enormously about aspects of emergency communications that I never knew before.
Yesterday I attended a regional VOAD meeting with my SEC; last month I didn't
even know VOAD existed! Last month I learned how trunked radio operates; not
only that, I learned it's vulnerability to overloads in a disaster. This
course has taken me WAY beyond showing up with a radio in my hand." -- Mike
Jaquish, W4WJH"
Very informative especially regarding what systems have been set up
over the years to facilitate EmComms. Quite an eye opener as to the versatility,
creativeness and ingenuity that ham radio operators demonstrate in emergency
operations. Thank you for the opportunity to continue my ham education and for
the skills that I've developed as a result of this course." -- Marti Brown,
KF4TRG* ** * *
For more information on this exciting opportunity for learning and
service, check out the ARRL Certification and Education Web pages or send e-mail
to ARRL Emergency Communications Course Manager Dan Miller, K3UFG.
////////////////////////////////////////////////// Last Item
/////////////////////////////////////////////////
Bill Lennox
US Air Force (Retired)
Full Time College Student (Emergency Management)
KD7EFP
Assistant Emergency Coordinator - Plans (ARES), Washington County, Oregon
Assistant Radio Officer - Plans (RACES), Washington County, Oregon
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From BillLennox@aol.com Wed Sep 17 00:36:28 2003
From: BillLennox@aol.com (BillLennox@aol.com)
Date: Tue, 16 Sep 2003 19:36:28 EDT
Subject: [Ares-races] East Coast US Ham Radio Activations for Hurricane Isabel
Message-ID: <191.1f1d89a7.2c98f87c@aol.com>
From: www.arrl.org
NOTE: This article contains radio frequencies, times and locations of some
activated stations.
Amateur Radio Ramps Up Preparations to Greet Hurricane Isabel
NEWINGTON, CT, Sep 16, 2003--Amateur Radio operators along the Eastern
Seaboard are gearing up to greet the arrival--probably on Thursday, September
18--of a diminished but still potentially damaging Hurricane Isabel. At this
point, the storm is expected to reach landfall along the coast of the
Carolinas before veering north toward Western Pennsylvania and Western New York. The
Hurricane Watch Net (HWN) on 14.325 MHz and WX4NHC at the National Hurricane
Center have announced plans to activate. The HWN will activate Wednesday,
September 17, at 1400UTC (10 AM EDT) and remain up through the storm's duration. The
National Hurricane Center is warning interests from the Carolinas northward
to southern New England to closely monitor Hurricane Isabel's progress. The
storm, once a powerful category 5 hurricane, now has been downgraded to a
category 2 hurricane with still-dangerous winds of 105 MPH with higher gusts
"As the hurricane achieves initial landfall, the HWN will focus
specifically on storm reports into and out of the immediately affected areas and
into the forecast path of the storm," said HWN Manager Mike Pilgrim, K5MP.
WX4NHC will commence operations September 17 at 2200 UTC (6 PM EDT), although
Amateur Radio Coordinator John McHugh, KU4GY, says the startup time could be
adjusted as conditions change. At that point, McHugh estimated the storm would be
some 300 miles offshore.
Pilgrim says it's essential that health-and-welfare traffic be
directed to other nets set up for that purpose. The Salvation Army Team Emergency
Radio Network (SATERN) has announced plans to activate on 14.265 MHz on September
18 at 1400 UTC (10 AM EDT). SATERN National Coordinator Pat McPherson, WW9E,
says the net's primary objective will be to handle necessary emergency and
health-and-welfare traffic.
Local emergency and informational nets also will be a part of the mix,
and hams in North Carolina already are getting into the spirit of things.
"There were lots of extra check-ins to the Tarheel Net on Monday night,"said
North Carolina Public Information Coordinator Gary Pearce, KN4AQ. "Activity always
picks up when a hurricane approaches the state." As the North Carolina
Section's HF Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES) net, the Tarheel Net meets on
3923 kHz nightly at 7:30 PM Eastern Time and on 7232 kHz during daylight hours,
if needed.
At WX4NHC, McHugh was calling on amateurs within 50 miles of the
Atlantic coast from South Carolina to New Jersey to provide weather data to the
Hurricane Watch Net. Net participants collect and report observed and measured
weather data to the net to relay to the National Hurricane Center via WX4NHC.
The net also routinely disseminates public storm advisories as they become
available. In the case of the recent Hurricane Fabian, which swept Bermuda, Amateur
Radio for a while became the only means of obtaining stormforecasts and
updates after power went down over much of the island.
"If you have weather equipment and are in the affected area please
try to get that data to WX4NHC, however do not put your self in danger at any
time," WX4NHC's McHugh said. He also asked that stations not relay weather
information given out by local media, since that information already is "in the
system."
In addition to monitoring the Hurricane Watch Net on 14.325 MHz,
WX4NHC will monitor Reflector 9210 on IRLP as well as the EchoLink system surface
reports using the on-line Hurricane Report Form on the WX4NHC Web site. He said
amateur weather enthusiasts with weather equipment and ON-NHC Volunteers may
report directly to WX4NHC on-line.
McHugh said these "surface reports" are very important as they give
hurricane specialists at the National Hurricane Center a clearer picture of what
is actually happening on the ground during the storm.
North Carolina ARRL Section Manager John Covington, W4CC, this week
alerted members in his section to be at the ready. "I encourage each of you to
make personal preparations for the storm," Covington said. "In addition, I hope
you will be able to contribute to Amateur Radio disaster communications, if
necessary." He urged amateurs to make sure their equipment is working, all
batteries charged and any emergency generators operational. "Do this today," he
said, "not during the storm!"
Covington also said those having any doubts about their safety should
prepare to evacuate. He said the Coastal Carolina Emergency Net on 3907 kHz at
1900 EDT will handle health-and-welfare traffic. "Be aware that most inbound
health-and-welfare traffic is very difficult to deliver," he said.
Covington was among those worrying less about the potential for wind
damage than about the possibility of widespread flooding. "With much of our
ground saturated from the heavy rain we've had this year, North Carolina should
be prepared for the possibility of flooding, even if the storm moves well to
the east of us," he said.
ARRL North Carolina Section Emergency Coordinator Bernie Nobles,
WA4MOK, reports that hams will staff the North Carolina Emergency Management
Eastern Branch headquarters in Kinston starting at 1 PM EDT today. Repeaters likely
will handle communication with North Carolina's Outer Banks, although HF will
remain available as a backup.
If Isabel takes a more westerly course, the Tarheel Netwill go into
full-time operation as needed. Nobles has asked hams to maintain watch on 3923
kHz as the storm approaches, whether or not a formal net is in session.
North Carolina Emergency Management Emergency Coordinator John
Guerriero, KG4HDT, says the amateur station at the state emergency operations center
in the capital city of Raleigh will activate Wednesday, September 17. Pearce
said Guerriero is organizing an umbrella of liaison stations to monitor the
wide-coverage 146.88 MHz repeater and the Tarheel Net frequencies.
Pearce says that on the Outer Banks--expected to be the storm's first
point of contact--Richard Marlin, K4HAT, checked out the repeaters and linked
systems that keep hams in touch in that remote area and said everything was
working well. Pearce said Marlin, who lives on Hatteras Island, was debating
whether or not to evacuate. Residents and vacationers on Ocracoke Island, which
has only ferry transportation between the mainland, were among those facing
mandatory evacuation orders in North Carolina.
Pearce said other North Carolina hams are reporting they're ready for
the storm. "Inland counties are watching the storm track carefully," he said.
"If Isabel turns a little westward, it could bring strong winds and flooding
to the interior. Nash, Wake and Johnston counties may also be home to thousands
of people who evacuate the coastal areas, and Interstate 40 may be made a
'one-way' highway in advance of the hurricane to expedite an evacuation."
Some states already are considering mobilizing National Guard troops
and relief organizations already have organized shelters for evacuees.
As of 11 AM EDT, the National Hurricane Center had issued a hurricane
watch from Little River Inlet, South Carolina, to Chincoteague,Virginia. That
includes Pamlico and Albermarle sounds as well as Chesapeake Bay south of
North Beach, Maryland and the tidal section of the Potomac River. The NHC said
hurricane warnings may be required later today.
Asof 11 AM EDT, the storm was 600 miles south-southeast of Cape
Hatteras, North Carolina, moving northwesterly at around 8 MPH. "A general motion
toward the northwest or north-northwest is expected during the next 24 hours
with some increase in forward speed," the NCH said. Hurricane force winds extend
outward up to 120 miles from the center, and tropical storm-force winds out
to 200 miles.
Although it's now a category 2 storm, the NHC said conditions "could
become favorable for restrengthening prior to landfall."
The southeastern and mid-Atlantic coasts already have been
experiencing large ocean swells and dangerous surf conditions.
////////////////////////////////////////////////// Last Item
/////////////////////////////////////////////////
Bill Lennox
US Air Force (Retired)
Full Time College Student (Emergency Management)
KD7EFP
Assistant Emergency Coordinator - Plans (ARES), Washington County, Oregon
Assistant Radio Officer - Plans (RACES), Washington County, Oregon
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