Greetings:
Jayne and I became licensed
hams for emergency purposes based on our
actual experience with an emergency situation where the lack of adequate
communications almost resulted in riot conditions and actual physical harm.
I even made the effort to become and Amateur EXTRA
and to get a vanity EXTRA call sign so that our views might be given
more consideration.
However, despite my letters to ARRL, QST and
CERT, including letters to every ARRL director, to encourage
consideration of establishing organizations like PVAN (which I did not know
existed) have been a dismal failure.
In addition, my discussion with various members of
SBARC about establishing something along the lines of PVAN have
not been encouraging, and frankly, Jayne and I have become discouraged
about SBARC's failure to take full advantage of Amateur Radio's potential
capabilities in local disaster and emergency situations.
Therefore, Bill's email, was most
welcome.
If SBARC determines to consider establishing a PVAN
type entity, Jayne and I would be very interested in participating in
establishing such an entity.
Jayne Harasty KJ6UAZ
Walt Harasty KU2Q
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, May 02, 2013 5:01
PM
Subject: Re: [Sbarc-list] Hams and
ecomm
Bill, thank you for passing this on to the group.
This
highlights an idea I brought up at a recent ARES meeting and I envision SBARC,
ARES, CERT and other local groups like home owners assns and neighborhood
watch playing important roles.
It's about "who ya gonna call" when 911,
cell phones, etc are not capable. I see SBARC and others recruiting
communicators while ARES trains the leaders and coordinates communication.
There's a lot of room for inclusion and creativity to build and prepare a
network to be effective in the worst circumstances. The technology, people and
motivation are out there, we just need a cooperative team to pull it all
together. With the fire season on top of us now, this can't happen soon
enough. - Rod WB9KMO
Bill Talanian <w1uuq@cox.net>
wrote:
California city incorporates hams in response program
Urgent Communications
Glenn Bischoff
Thu, 2013-05-02 11:00
When a disaster strikes, amateur radio
operators in the affected area are quick to mobilize. The result is invaluable
communications services at a time when they are most needed. In some parts of
the world, where the first-responder infrastructure isnÂ’t as robust as it is
in the U.S., the hams step into that role, as seen in the aftermath of the
Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004.
Within the U.S., the role of hams usually
is to provide supportive services, as they did in the aftermath of Superstorm
Sandy last October, when hams helped the American Red Cross set up
communications in numerous ad-hoc shelters established across the region,
where commercial communications were rendered inoperable in many
places.
It is not unusual for an informal connection to exist between
public-safety agencies and the local amateur-radio community; such a
connection helps the mobilization effort. But, in one southern California
city, a formal relationship was established, with the result being the
creation of the Peninsula Volunteer Alert Network, or PVAN.
Rancho
Palos Verde is city of 42,000 inhabitants, located on the Pacific Ocean just a
few miles due west of Long Beach. It doesnÂ’t have much crime, but it is prone
to natural disasters, such as earthquakes and wildfires. Despite this, it
never really occurred to anybody to formally leverage ham radio until the 9/11
terrorist attacks.
“It dawned on us that there are a lot of big
targets in our area. There are refineries in San Pedro [an adjacent city], and
lot of shipping goes through there,” said PVAN Chairman Denzel Dyer. “We
needed to prepare for a big event.”
That realization led to a big
idea: establish a way that the cityÂ’s numerous neighborhood-watch groups
could communicate with each other during emergencies, with hams at the center
of the strategy. The 150-member strong Palos Verde Amateur Radio Club was the
logical place to start. The goal was to ensure that every neighborhood-watch
organizationÂeach of which typically covers about 6 square
blocksÂhad a ham in their midst. The PVAN, which started with 4-5 hams in
November 2002, now has 86 members, all of them hams, according to Dyer. New
PVAN members go through a training
regimen that is coordinated by the city and participate in at least one mock
emergency drill each year.
The radio club not only convinced local
sheriffs and fire officials that this effort a good idea, but they also
officials that amateur radio was the best option, given the topology of the
surrounding area, which consists of numerous peaks and valleys.
“They
asked about FRS (family radio service) and CB (citizens-band radio), but
amateur is the most reliable communications you can get,” said Alan
Soderberg, a PVAN board member.
Despite the fact that amateur-radio
technology is highly reliable, the topology still creates some challenges,
because there are plenty of dead spots. However, Harris
recently came to the rescue by donating a UHF digital mobile repeater.
“One
of our employees knew a PVAN member, and one thing led to another,” said
Steve Howard, a Harris regional sales
manager.
Though grateful for the repeater, Dyer noted that itÂ’s
not yet operational. “Now we need a duplexer,” he
deadpanned.
Source URL: http://urgentcomm.com/disaster-response/california-city-incorporates-hams-response-program
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