[ARRL-OK] Fw: The ARES E-Letter for December 19, 2012
Mark Conklin
n7xyo at yahoo.com
Wed Dec 19 07:34:56 EST 2012
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Subject: The ARES E-Letter for December 19, 2012
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December 19,
2012Editor: Rick Palm, K1CE
ARES E-Letter Archive
ARES Home
ARRL Home Page
In This Issue:
* Hurricane Center Station Active on SKYWARN Recognition Day
* Hurricane Sandy Spawns Lessons Learned for
Connecticut ARES
* Super Typhoon Bopha: Hams Respond with
Communications Support
* GAREC-2012 A Wrap
* Clark County, Washington SET: Independence Day in
November
* Santa Barbara ARES Saves the Day for Agencies in
Earthquake Drill
* Utah ARES/SKYWARN Spotters Prompt Insightful NWS
Letter
* Nominate Now: 2012 ARRL International Humanitarian
Award
* K1CE For a Final
Hurricane Center
Station Active on SKYWARN Recognition Day
WX4NHC, the Amateur
Radio station at the National Hurricane Center in Miami, Florida, was activated on Saturday,
December 1, for SKYWARN Recognition Day, a nationwide event. Julio Ripoll,
WD4R, Assistant Coordinator for the station, said "This was an excellent
on-the-air event to practice our radio skills and exchange basic weather
data over ham radio between NWS forecast offices and volunteer SKYWARN
spotters. We tested our equipment, antennas, computers and several modes of
communications that are used to gather surface eye witness reports during severe
weather events including, of course, hurricanes." Ripoll said that "this
was also a good opportunity to train new operators on equipment and
procedures, and interface with NWS staff that may not be familiar with the
capabilities of Amateur Radio communications."
"Even though HF
propagation was poor from our location in south Florida, WX4NHC operators
were able to make a total of 122 contacts -- 70 on HF, VHF and UHF
frequencies, and 52 on EchoLink and IRLP," reported Ripoll. "We made direct contact
with 24 NWS offices nationwide. The farthest station contacted was in
Estonia where it was -1° C with light snow. The coldest weather report
received was 18° F from Turner, Maine. The warmest weather report received
was 82° F from Brownsville, Texas. The most unique report was
"Volcanic Haze" from Honolulu, Hawaii." Ripoll offered special thanks to the VoIP Hurricane Net team
operating from NWS Taunton, Massachusetts, for sponsoring the net on
EchoLink/IRLP.
Hurricane Sandy
Spawns Lessons Learned for Connecticut ARES
In last
month's issue, Connecticut Section Manager Betsey Doane, K1EIC, reported on
her section's comprehensive deployment for massive storm Sandy. This month,
her Section Emergency Coordinator Wayne Gronlund, N1CLV, offers his
perspective on lessons learned from the event:
The old adage
that "a disaster is not the time to be exchanging business cards" was
validated. In areas where strong relationships had been previously developed
with our served agencies (Red Cross, Connecticut Department of Emergency
Management and Homeland Security, and municipal governments), requests for
Amateur Radio assistance in shelters and at EOCs were quickly and effectively
handled at the local level. In those areas where ARES/SKYWARN officials
exercised active/strong leadership and were proactive in offering and providing
Amateur Radio support, there were a lot of useful and productive
assignments available to our volunteers.
The five regional DECs
and the SKYWARN DEC (or their designated representatives) participated in
statewide SEC nets conducted every two hours. The SEC net gave me a good feel
for where things were going well and where they were not. Section Manager
Doane was an active participant and helped me to identify and address any
issues in our response.
VHF/UHF frequencies (both
repeater and simplex) provided the primary platform for our disaster response and
emergency communications needs. During the widespread power outages, many
of our repeater systems shifted to emergency power and continued to
function. Repeater owners and control operators did an extraordinary job of
keeping us on the air. The KB1AEV linked system in particular remained viable and
provided coverage for approximately 80% of the state. Many of the
facilities where we rendered assistance would not easily accommodate deployment of
HF antennas.
Areas for Improvement
A significant number of our volunteers are affiliated with both
ARES/SKYWARN and the Red Cross (and to some extent, other volunteer groups who provide
disaster support). Depending on the nature of the incident, volunteers may
choose to assist one of the other non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
whom they support rather than ARES/SKYWARN. This "double counting" of
resources creates a shortfall in the numbers of operators expected to be available
to help.
Getting more ARES/SKYWARN leaders at all
levels (ASEC/DEC/ADEC/EC/AEC) to exercise what we in the Coast Guard call
"trained initiative" would improve our effectiveness when communications up/down
the chain of command are difficult or not readily available. Those
leadership officials with local situational awareness who know what needs to be
done and how to get it done right without being told do so, could help to
decentralize control and make the entire organization more responsive. Note:
this is NOT suggesting self-deployment of ARES/SKYWARN members, but rather
leadership being exercised at the lowest levels of the organization. --
Wayne Gronlund, N1CLV, Connecticut Section Emergency Coordinator
Super Typhoon Bopha: Hams
Respond with Communications Support
Typhoon Bopha
(local name Pablo), a Category 5 super storm, hit the Philippines on December
3 uprooting trees, downing power lines, sparking landslides and driving
40,000 people to head for shelters. It was the strongest of about 20 typhoons
to affect the country this year with its heavy rain and wind gusting up to
210 km/h as it came ashore at Mindanao. It was the strongest typhoon to
ever hit the southern island. More than 600 died.
The
Philippine Amateur Radio Association (PARA) had its ham emergency radio
operations (HERO) program working when the typhoon struck. PARA used all
available means of communication including HF radio (7.095 MHz), VHF radio (144.740
MHz), the Internet and social media such as Facebook, e-mail, and EchoLink
to monitor the situation and give updates to all concerned as necessary.
RADNET 5, a local club of Amateur Radio operators in
Tacloban City, provided the city with vital communications links and was in
constant coordination with the City Disaster Risk Reduction Management
Council (CDRRMC). 5700 families were evacuated from Saint Bernard. RADNET 5 also
assisted the Red Cross in Tacloban and Saint Bernard. The City Government
of Tacloban City used the Tacloban Convention Center as one of its
evacuation points.
Operations and relief proceeded well with
planning and preparations, the cooperation of evacuees and the mammoth
response and recovery efforts. -- Jim Linton, VK3PC, Chairman, IARU Region 3
Disaster Communications Committee, with Philippines Amateur Radio Association
Chief Operating Officer Eddie Valdez, DU1EV
GAREC-2012 A Wrap
The eighth
Global Amateur Radio Emergency Communications Conference, GAREC-2012, took
place in Port Dickson, Malaysia, November 12-14, hosted by the Malaysian
Amateur Radio Transmitters Society and was attended by 17 delegates from nine
countries. The theme of the conference was "One world, One commitment." In
2005, the first Global Amateur Radio Emergency Communications (GAREC)
Conference was organized on the initiative of Seppo Sisatto, OH1VR, in Tampere,
Finland. Following the success of this event and the increased interest in
international and regional cooperation on the function of emergency
communications, GAREC conferences were established as annual events.
For the Malaysia conference last month, presentations were received on
the mobile emergency weather system, which provides a means for citizens to
assist authorities with weather reports using simple equipment and
training, augmented by the amateur service.
The status of the
Amateur Radio Emergency Service provisions in Finland, Hong Kong,
Indonesia, Germany and Switzerland was discussed, which highlighted the differences
and similarities in approaches to emergency planning by the respective
countries, directed to meeting the needs of their peoples. The Swiss delegation
presented their procedure for a special net control protocol, which
provided more efficient message handling when the volume of messages increases
beyond the needs of a simple net.
The conferees
considered the common issues facing Amateur Radio emergency communicators, and
recognized that while solutions may not be easy to find, sharing the problems
and allowing individual countries to realize that they were not alone
provides valuable support to the global Amateur Radio emergency and disaster
relief community.
Conferees participated in two exercises,
the first a directed exercise where they were asked to work together as a
team, providing emergency communications for a fictional country and event.
This encouraged the delegates to consider what their ideal network and
licensing environment would look like as well as enhance interpersonal
relationships helping them to work together more efficiently in the future.
The IARU HF Emergency Operating Procedure was reviewed following
the experience of use in GlobalSET and national exercises. A number of
opportunities were identified to improve the procedure and these will be
developed by the delegates for presentation to the IARU Regional Emergency
Coordinators (EMCOR).
The titles of "GAREC" and the "Global Centre of Emergency Frequencies"
(CoA frequencies) can be misinterpreted as only referring to "Global"
emergencies, concluded the conferees. This is not the case, they said. "The
Conference and CoA frequencies are available for all emergency
communicators around the world to share their knowledge to assist their colleagues
who are having problems themselves."
There was a
discussion on how GAREC and emergency communications should be branded to allow
more exposure to served agencies and the public we also serve: "All emergency
communications groups are encouraged to share information on all
emergencies they are asked to assist with so that our public profile is raised and
understanding of our service improved."
It was
discovered that four countries were independently looking at the issue of monitoring
the CoA frequencies to allow the alert to be raised for a disaster or
emergency in an automatic manner: "It would obviously be better for those
countries to collaborate on establishing a standard solution. The continuation
of GAREC as a forum to share ideas and plans may prevent duplicate efforts
in the future."
There was increased understanding of the
restrictions placed on radio amateurs in different countries in the
context of emergency response.
The delegates suggested that
future conferences seek to involve partners in emergency response such as
IFRC and ITU to ensure that the most value is gained from the memoranda of
understanding that exist between those organizations and the Amateur Radio
community.
The next GAREC will be held in Zurich,
Switzerland, June 25-27, 2013 and all groups and organizations are invited to
attend. Future conference venues have been identified as Huntsville, Alabama,
United States in 2014; and Tampere, Finland in 2015. The conferees thanked
their hosts, the Malaysian Amateur Radio Transmitters Society, and the
people of Malaysia.
Documents of GAREC-2012 can be found here.
IARU and GAREC
For each conference, an
organizing committee works together with a local host, and IARU
representatives participate in the event. In its 2009 meeting in Christchurch, New
Zealand, the IARU Administrative Council has now defined the relationship
between GAREC and IARU, by adopting the following recommendations contained in
the Statement of the GAREC-2009 Conference: "GAREC 2009 recommends that GAREC
conferences should continue to be held in locations throughout the world
to the extent possible and should maintain the character of GAREC as an
informal meeting among representatives of IARU member societies and of Amateur
Radio Emergency Communications Groups within or outside of the respective
National IARU Member Society, serving as a forum for the exchange of
experience and as an advisory body for the work on emergency communications of the
IARU."
Clark
County, Washington SET: Independence Day in November
No, it wasn't the misdirection of a national holiday, but rather the
opportunity to focus on digital messaging modes that motivated Clark County
(Washington) ARES/RACES members to venture out for three hours on a dark and
stormy evening, November 19. A weekday evening was selected this time around
to allow members who are not normally available for weekday and/or weekend
exercises to participate.
This Fall 2012 SET scenario
involved a typical "4th of July" public agency communications overload, with
the added task load of two simulated major fireworks-related fires, one in
a mixed business/residential neighborhood and the other adjacent to
Interstate 5 just north of Vancouver. More than 35 members deployed to their
designated team locations, including the County EOC, the Sheriff's office, five
fire departments, one hospital, one EMS station, and one SAR group. In
order to practice multiple messaging modes in parallel, injects of simulated
traffic came via Winlink 2000 (RMS Express and Airmail), packet BBS
(Outpost), and voice. Interoperability between Windows, Mac, and Linux computers was
exercised as well. At one point voice net control was smoothly shifted
from 2m to 70cm. The 1.25m band was also used for passing messages. -- Steve
Aberle, WA7PTM, Western Washington Official Emergency Station
Santa Barbara ARES Saves the Day for
Agencies in Earthquake Drill
The four Santa Barbara
(California) County ARES units were activated on November 15 to assist the
county's public health department in a state-wide emergency response exercise.
As it turned out, the amateurs saved the day when the participating
agencies were unable to deliver messages through the new WebEOC computer system.
The
scenario was a major earthquake and each county health department was to respond
as though the disaster were local. In Santa Barbara County, players included
all hospitals, skilled nursing facilities, the American Red Cross, Direct Relief
International, and retirement communities, law enforcement, public works,
etc.
The County Office of Emergency Management staff had
been training local agencies on the Web EOC computer program for several
months. This exercise was to be a real-time test of the system, recently
installed in the new Emergency Operations Center (EOC).
ARES
members reported to five local hospitals to establish backup communications
with the Public Health Department's Operations Center (DOC) and the County
EOC. They were also asked to respond to a medical field treatment center in
Santa Barbara, about 15 miles from the DOC.
Because
three of the hospitals are separated from Santa Barbara and the DOC by a
4,000'-high mountain range, a 2-meter repeater on the ridgeline was used for
county-wide voice communications. Each of the four areas established nets on
their local repeaters and on 2-meter simplex frequencies to communicate
between field units, EOCs, hospitals, and the DOC.
Within
an hour of the exercise start, it was apparent traffic flow on the WebEOC
system was in trouble. ARES communicators at hospitals and city EOCs were
sending queries to the County EOC about messages that had not been answered
and information expected to arrive had not been received via WebEOC.
Fortunately, flow of traffic to, from, and between the hospitals, EOC, and DOC on
the ARES networks was seamless and important information, such as
conference call phone numbers and codes, allowed the exercise to continue as
planned. A Battalion Chief who is the Communications Coordinator of the Lompoc
Fire Department said, "ARES was about the only communications that worked."
The ARES operator at the EOC also checked in to the state
and region nets on 40 meters. In addition to voice communications backup,
the Public Health Department requested the Santa Barbara ARES unit to
provide Slow Scan TV from a field treatment site they had set up in Santa
Barbara, about 15 miles away, to the DOC. A 224 MHz repeater on the mountain was
used to send the images, which were received in both the radio room at the
DOC and in the operations center so staff managing the emergency could see
"victims" arriving, doctors providing triage and care, and transportation.
The Emergency Preparedness Program Administrator was extremely pleased with
the abilities of Amateur Radio to be flexible and respond to the needs of
the operations center staff as they occurred. The staff specifically
requests SSTV whenever they feel it will be useful to them.
Nineteen ARES members participated, led by Lou Dartanner, N6ZKJ, District
Emergency Coordinator; Bruce Gordon, N6OLT, Santa Barbara EC; Ray Lischka,
W9EC, Lompoc EC; Jim Gilbert, AK6JG, Santa Ynez EC; and Dennis Daniel, KM6DF,
Santa Maria EC.
The new County EOC opened in 2011.
During the construction, the Office of Emergency Management staff solicited
input from ARES officials, not only for communications but for ideas and
comments in general. When it came to installing amateur antennas on the 40'
tower, the OEM manager told ARES there was a problem. He said the sides of the
tower were
The tower at the Santa Barbara County EOC, with
tri-band antenna on the left and HF antenna on the cross arm on the right. The
third rod is the lightning rod. (photo courtesy N6ZKJ)
pretty full, would we mind a spot on the
top? We said we would manage! The top of the tower sports a tri-band antenna
(2 meter, 220 MHz, 450 MHz bands), and a "Carolina Windom" HF antenna on a
cross arm to cover all HF Amateur frequencies from 3.5 to 30 MHz. At the 30'
level is a 3-element 2-meter beam antenna aimed at an amateur repeater
across the mountain. On top of the building are two discones, 120-1200 MHz,
with one also able to work 6 meters and the other 27 MHz. -- Lou Dartanner,
N6ZKJ, District Emergency Coordinator, Santa Barbara, California, ARES
Utah ARES/SKYWARN
Spotters Prompt Insightful NWS Letter
The Uintah
County (Utah) ARES group was called by the National Weather Service's Grand
Junction (Colorado) forecast office on Saturday, August 11, to work in a
SKYWARN capacity for expected severe weather. Lamond Harrison, WX7L, Uintah
County EC, sent alerting texts and e-mails, and put out a call on the radio to
ARES/SKYWARN members to be prepared. Harrison reports: "At about 1:30 PM we
were activated. The NWS requested that we have people stationed at multiple
points on the mountain north of Vernal to report the received weather. The
computer models were predicting heavy rain with hail up to 1.25 inches in
diameter and high winds. So we grabbed our equipment and off we went."
Uintah County is located in the northeastern corner of
Utah. It's larger than Delaware and has a population of about 33,000. Dagget
County is north of the county next to Wyoming, and Moffat County, Colorado,
is to the east. The NWS office in Grand Junction is located 140 miles
southeast of Vernal, Utah. Because of the mountains in the area, we are in a
Doppler radar "black hole," said Harrison. "The bottom of the radar image over
Uintah County is about 20,000 feet high. Vernal's elevation is 5230 feet.
So, the radar does not come close to seeing what is happening on the ground.
The southern part of Uintah County is high mountain desert. Only Sage
brush, cactus, and a few clumps of grass grow there. Flash flooding is a
constant danger. So having the radar working properly is critical for the highway
over the mountains and the many roads and energy workers in the desert.
Because the Doppler radar image is only looking at the tops of the storm
clouds the NWS has written computer models to let them know what is actually
happening on the ground. They want them perfect. That is why they called us,
Harrison said.
The storm produced heavy rain as
expected, with the largest hail measuring 0.5 inches. Jim Pringle of the NWS
office sent this post-event e-mail to Harrison:
Hello
Lamond:
Our staff and I are very grateful for the
assistance of you and your SKYWARN folks to mobilize and monitor the weather
for us today. Although there were no "big" events from this afternoon's
thunderstorms in northern Uintah County, your information helped us in
several ways: Based on your reports, we learned that our radar was running "too
hot" as it was indicating hail stones up to 1.25 inches in diameter, not
only in Uintah County but also in Moffat County. Your information also
indicated that the strong winds (i.e., greater than 50 mph) did not materialize.
This information resulted in our forecast staff making the apparently
correct decision to NOT issue any Severe Thunderstorm Warnings for northern
Uintah County or Moffat County, even though our radar algorithms were telling us
otherwise.
Also, your reports confirmed that
heavy rain was occurring from those storms over northern Uintah County, which
essentially confirmed the radar rainfall precipitation estimates of a
third to half an inch over any one spot from any individual storm cell.
This morning, our forecast staff did discuss the
possibility of drier air moving into northern Uintah County sooner than any
thunderstorms could develop. Depending on the atmospheric computer model,
thunderstorms could have been totally suppressed over northern Uintah County or
they could develop and persist into the evening hours. That is why we were
on the fence this morning when I spoke with you and Julie during the
"standby" notification at 0900 MDT. Then after the thunderstorms initially
developed before noon today, and when they persisted through the time that I
requested the SKYWARN activation, it was decided in our office to err on the
conservative side and assume the possibility that the storms could persist
into the early evening hours in northern to central Uintah County. Well,
hindsight is always 20-20, and the drier air moved into northwest Uintah County
by 1600 MDT. As of 1700 MDT, that drier air already moved southward with
the cool front into central Uintah County.
It was
a sincere pleasure working with you and your SKYWARN spotters today. :-) --
Jim
Harrison said his group was grateful to have
been of help: Erik Larsen, AD70V; Heather Larsen, AD7OW; Christopher
Larsen, KF7JRE; Jonathan Larsen, KF7JRK; Dirk Checketts, KD7ZLG; Susan Checketts,
KF7MWS; and Lamond Harrison, WX7L, who concluded "It was fun, wet, and
deliciously cool on the mountain. The temperature dropped to 51 degrees while
we were there. It felt good to provide a service that afternoon, and have a
heck of a lot of fun also."
Nominate Now: 2012 ARRL International Humanitarian Award
Nominations are open for the 2012 ARRL International
Humanitarian Award. This award is conferred upon an amateur or amateurs who
demonstrate devotion to human welfare, peace and international understanding
through Amateur Radio. The League established the annual prize to
recognize those radio amateurs who have used ham radio to provide extraordinary
service to others in times of crisis or disaster. As one of the few
telecommunication services that allow people throughout the world from all walks of
life to meet and talk with each other, Amateur Radio spreads goodwill across
political boundaries.
The ARRL International
Humanitarian Award recognizes the Amateur Radio Service's unique role in
international communication and the assistance amateurs regularly provide to people in
need. Nominations should include a summary of the nominee's actions that
qualify the individual (or individuals) for this award, plus verifying
statements from at least two people having first-hand knowledge of the events
warranting the nomination. These statements may be from an official of a
group (for example, the American Red Cross, The Salvation Army, a local or
state emergency management official) that benefited from the nominee's
particular Amateur Radio contribution. Nominations should include the names and
addresses of all references. A committee appointed by the League's President
recommends the award recipient(s) to the ARRL Board, which makes the final
decision. The committee is now accepting nominations from Amateur Radio,
governmental or other organizations that have benefited from extraordinary
service rendered by an Amateur Radio operator or group.
Andrey Fedorov, KL1A/RW3AH, received the 2011 ARRL International Humanitarian
Award. Fedorov is the former Chief Coordinator of the Russian Amateur
Radio Emergency Service (RARES) and has been involved in providing
communications support via Amateur Radio for almost 25 years. He has also served in
Rwanda, Turkey and Kosovo as an Emergency Rescue Service Officer, and as a
Regional Communications Officer for the UN Peacekeeping Mission in
Afghanistan.
All nominations and supporting materials for the 2012
ARRL International Humanitarian Award must be submitted in writing in
English to ARRL International Humanitarian Award, 225 Main St, Newington, CT
06111 USA. Nomination submissions are due by December 31, 2012. In the event
that no nominations are received, the committee may determine a recipient
or decide to make no award. The recipient of the ARRL International
Humanitarian Award receives an engraved plaque, as well as a profile in QST and other ARRL venues.
K1CE
For a Final
I was taken by the letter from the
National Weather Service's meteorologist to the EC of Uintah county, Utah,
Lamond Harrison, WX7L. It provided an intimate glimpse into just how
significant the NWS considers Amateur Radio's SKYWARN contributions are. I found it
be fascinating and richly rewarding. Congratulations to Uintah county
ARES.
And finally, happy holidays from all of us here on the
corporate mega-campus of the ARES E-Letter Editorial and Production
offices, Daytona Beach, Florida, the world's most famous beach! Catch you next
year! 73, Rick, K1CE
___________
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