[MarinTeams] Interesting letter to the ARRL Newsletter

Lee&John Howard leejohn7 at gmail.com
Thu May 22 16:48:17 EDT 2014


While it may be obvious, I'll just add that this perfectly fits the grand
scheme for the Neighborhood Response Groups, which all seek an assured way
to communicate with outside authority.

John Howard


On Thu, May 22, 2014 at 12:38 PM, Buffum, John <buffumj at pharmacy.ucsf.edu>wrote:

> I agree with his conclusions.
> John Buffum, PharmD, BCPP
> Clinical Professor of Pharmacy, UCSF
> Vice President, Marin County Pharmacists Association
>
> ________________________________________
> From: MarinTeams [marinteams-bounces at mailman.qth.net] on behalf of Sharon
> Grabovac [slgrabovac at gmail.com]
> Sent: Thursday, May 22, 2014 12:05 PM
> To: George Shea
> Cc: Hbco2; MarinTeams at mailman.qth.net
> Subject: Re: [MarinTeams] Interesting letter to the ARRL Newsletter
>
> This is so great.  Thank you for sending it out.
>
> Sharon
>
>
> On Wed, May 21, 2014 at 3:36 PM, George Shea via MarinTeams <
> marinteams at mailman.qth.net> wrote:
>
> > Letters: New Focus on the "Served Community"
> > I appreciate the focus you have been bringing in recent QST articles. I
> > was active in leadership in Palm Beach County (Florida) ARES during our
> > calamitous 2004-2005 hurricane seasons when we activated for four
> different
> > storms. Based on that experience, we encountered challenges under the
> > then-current ARES model, which focused on served agencies. Staffing was a
> > major issue for us. Based on this experience, I came to the conclusion,
> > further reinforced in the years that followed, that the ham community
> > needed to turn its focus toward their own individual neighborhoods and
> > communities.
> > Now, I am more convinced than ever that the future utility of Amateur
> > Radio in public service lies in the individual ham's immediate community
> -
> > the "served community" as opposed to the traditional served agency model.
> > The public still has little recourse when cell phones stop working. A ham
> > can organize a communications system in his neighborhood, make it known
> > that his is the door to knock on to get a message out, and when an
> incident
> > happens, he can do what he is most likely to do anyway: hunker down with
> > his family and protect them and his property, instead of being asked to
> > make accommodations to leave all that is precious to him behind to drive
> > through potentially hazardous conditions to a distant service point like
> an
> > EOC or shelter to serve somebody else's needs.
> > Of course, there will always be a need/opportunity for well-equipped,
> > well-trained, well-organized self-sufficient teams of communicators to
> > travel to areas affected by worst-case scenarios, and that should be part
> > of planning efforts, but they should come from operators with personal
> > situations that have been unaffected by the disaster effects. Asking a
> ham
> > to leave his family and property who are clearly out of harm's way to go
> > help others is much more reasonable and rational than asking him while he
> > and his family are personally affected by the incident. -- John Sheats,
> > WD4V, Loxahatchee, Florida
> > ****************************************************************
> > George Shea
> > President HWA a 501(c)(3) Community Organization
> >
> > PS      :       The Served Community concept is THE basis for CERT Radio
> > Marin.  While Bill Smith and others have dabbled with providing
> > "communication services" to the Marin Medical Reserve Corps (for which
> each
> > of us can still participate), our primary responsibility is to our own
> > family and neighborhood.  Our local news include real world potential
> > disasters waiting to happen here in Marin:  wildfire, cluster
> earthquakes,
> > El Nino potential flooding.  Please read the below article, and pay
> > particular attention to the tips at the end.  We in the CERT Community
> > should prepare ourselves and encourage our neighbors.
> >
> > See:
> >
> http://www.marinij.com/News/ci_25802861/Olema-research-could-lead-to-clues#
> >
> >    Olema research could lead to clues about future earthqua...
> > A section of the San Andreas Fault running through Olema has been the
> > subject of intense study in an effort to determine when the next big
> > earthquake might hi...
> > View on www.marinij.com Preview by Yahoo
> > ______________________________________________________________
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> >
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