[W1SMH] Amateurs to remember September 11

Martin Pyne [email protected]
Tue, 10 Sep 2002 19:36:03 -0400



ARLB052 Amateurs to remember September 11

New York City Amateur Radio Emergency Service/Radio Amateur Civil
Emergency Service (NYC ARES/RACES) members will observe the first
anniversary of the September 11 terrorist attacks that destroyed the
World Trade Center by activating to assist with the remembrance
activities. NYC ARES/RACES will provide communications support to
various agencies during commemorative services and events. In addition,
ARRL President Jim Haynie, W5JBP, has been invited to address a global
repeater linkup the evening of September 11. And, special event stations
are set to be on the air from New York City and from Washington, DC, to
commemorate the occasion.

Some 30 NYC ARES/RACES members will be deployed across the Greater New
York City area to support the American Red Cross, The Salvation Army,
the New York City Office of Emergency Management and other agencies. One
year ago, ARES teams--most of them from New York City, Long Island and
New Jersey--supported the same agencies during the response to the
terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center.

ARRL New York City District Emergency Coordinator and RACES Officer
Charles Hargrove, N2NOV, expressed heartfelt thanks to all amateurs
coming to NYC to help. "With the chance to train and practice made even
more available to the average ham these days, please join your local
ARES group and put into practice what you learn," he said. "Your
community will thank you for it when the need truly arises."

The NYC ARES/RACES activation on the first anniversary of the terrorist
attacks will honor the memories of the amateurs who lost their lives in
the collapse of the World Trade Center's twin towers and the other
victims.

President Haynie is scheduled to address a massive repeater linkup that
hopes to span the globe. "I plan to thank all the hams who spent
thousands of hours volunteering their time on September 11," Haynie
said. "They again demonstrated the power of Amateur Radio in times of
need." Haynie also said he wants to again acknowledge the hundreds of
supportive messages from International Amateur Radio Union (IARU)
member-societies that arrived in the wake of the attacks.

The effort, called the Commemorative 9/11 Net, is being spearheaded by
Len Signoretti, N2LEN, of Brooklyn, New York. N2LEN's 440.050 MHz (CTCSS
114.8 Hz) internet-linked repeater covers the Greater New York City
area. The linkup will rely on either EchoLink or eQSO Internet software
connections. Signoretti said his UHF machine is used as a central hub to
coordinate EchoLink and eQSO, so users on each can communicate. The net
will attempt to interconnect repeaters in all 50 US states as well as in
many other countries around the world.

The Commemorative 9/11 Net is scheduled to get under way at 8 PM Eastern
Daylight Time (0000z September 12) on EchoLink and eQSO servers and
could run as long as two hours. Haynie is scheduled to address the
cyberspace and RF-linked gathering at around 9 PM EDT.

John Nistico, NY6DX, has announced plans to operate special event
station W2002WTC starting at 0000z September 11. To comply with FCC
rules, he will append "W2002WTC" to his legally assigned call sign. QSL
requests go to NY6DX.

Deanna Lutz, K7DID, reports that special event station K4P will operate
from the Pentagon and other Washington, DC-area sites September 11 and
12. QSL with an SASE to K7DID, PO Box 70071, Washington, DC 20024. NNNN
/EX