Ok Folks I am done, the last post I put up here talked about opportunities with the County, and guess what! I got 2 replies both off list, one from Rod who is now in Arizona so not able to assist and one from a new comer who wants to be active in "serving others" NOBODY else, not even the club president or anyone.
So I will draw my pleas to a close. We had a golden opportunity to be relevant again, but nobody has the interest to make it happen. I will not post about this again and I will also not have any of my articles posted on this site either. If any of you are interested in my commentaries, my blog (Tell it Like it is) or my Public Safety Advocate weekly news summary and articles dealing with Public Safety communications, please feel free to go to my web-site and sign up (www.andrewseybold.comhttp://www.andrewseybold.com) they are all free. . I will continue to support W1UUQ with the technical aspects of the sites and what we are doing to make them better but I will not ever bring up the idea of getting back into the good graces of the County and actually reestablishing ham radio as a relevant disaster communications possibility.
Andy W6AMS
Andy,
I read your post and was very interested in what you had to say on the subject of emergency services. Although my interests in Amateur Radio are more technical and experimental in nature, emergency services are an important aspect of the Amateur service and I applaud your efforts to reinvigorate that aspect of SBARC and ARES.
The potential benefits of a relationship with hams are often overlooked in an era of expansive digital networks both wired and wireless. Although we know that these networks will never be as resilient and reliable as ham radio, most non-hams don’t. It seems that the Club and ARES has an identity crisis in this area and so we are left with an ARES group that gets few if any calls to activation and a community of SBARC hams whose diverse interests have drifted to other aspects of the hobby.
However, we still have a vibrant volunteer program with hams who are willing to get up early, stay up late and be out all day supporting local events. This happens because of the leadership of Rick, KG6VLB. and the dependable group of volunteer hams that, under his leadership, provide invaluable communications resources to local organizations.
So, it seems that the Club has the people, the talent and the equipment to perform similar support functions in the event of an emergency, we just need volunteer emergency services leadership to coordinate these programs, make new inroads and recruit from the pool of ham-volunteers who are clearly willing to help when they feel they are needed and appreciated.
Any organization is only as good as its members and we need someone from our incredibly diverse and talented group to step forward to take the reins for a new generation of emergency services. This means someone who will handle the logistics of dealing with served agencies, put together programs and recruit volunteers who feel that their efforts are appreciated and needed, just as Rick’s volunteers are rewarded by supporting road races and parades.
A group such as an emergency services support team needs a volunteer leader who is passionate about the task and willing to put in the time to organize and support meaningful programs that are truly valued by the served agencies. Volunteers seek opportunities that are rewarding and productive and the reward for volunteering is that feeling of being appreciated and needed by both the volunteer organization (SBARC) and the served organization/agency (SB County).
There is no doubt that SBARC needs stronger ties with SB emergency response agencies if it is to remain a relevant emergency resource. The solution will not come from just a board mandate. We have no paid staff to be assigned to the initiative and to carry out such a mandate. The solution, as is the case with all SBARC initiatives, is with assembling the right volunteer leadership for the task. We need a strong volunteer leader who’s personal interests align with that mission to step forward to lead the charge, organize the programs, recruit the team and effect the changes needed.
I don’t read the silence on this list as our Club community's lack of a desire for such an initiative to take shape or lack of interest in helping or serving in a well-organized emergency services program. I think the silence represents the inability of the readers (myself included) to take up the herculean task of revitalizing such an effort (I personally don’t have the time nor do I know where I would start if it did). Until a passionate individual with the time and talents to lead this effort steps forward, I am afraid that it will remain an area of the Club in need of improvement.
LCM
Levi C. Maaia, K6LCM
www.levi.maaia.com twitter.com/levimaaia
805.604.5384 Tel. 877.239.4146 Fax
Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail.
From: Andrew Seybold aseybold@andrewseybold.com Reply: Andrew Seybold aseybold@andrewseybold.com> Date: March 15, 2015 at 5:10:51 PM To: sbarc-list@lists.netlojix.com sbarc-list@lists.netlojix.com> Subject: [Sbarc-list] My Last Post to SBARC
Ok Folks I am done, the last post I put up here talked about opportunities with the County, and guess what! I got 2 replies both off list, one from Rod who is now in Arizona so not able to assist and one from a new comer who wants to be active in “serving others” NOBODY else, not even the club president or anyone.
So I will draw my pleas to a close. We had a golden opportunity to be relevant again, but nobody has the interest to make it happen. I will not post about this again and I will also not have any of my articles posted on this site either. If any of you are interested in my commentaries, my blog (Tell it Like it is) or my Public Safety Advocate weekly news summary and articles dealing with Public Safety communications, please feel free to go to my web-site and sign up (www.andrewseybold.com) they are all free. . I will continue to support W1UUQ with the technical aspects of the sites and what we are doing to make them better but I will not ever bring up the idea of getting back into the good graces of the County and actually reestablishing ham radio as a relevant disaster communications possibility.
Andy W6AMS
_______________________________________________ SBARC-list mailing list SBARC-list@lists.netlojix.com http://lists.netlojix.com/mailman/listinfo/sbarc-list
I would like to echo Levi's thoughts here and add my own. Being a fairly new ham I decided to get my license and learn more about amateur radio for basically three reasons. I was interested in two way radio in general, I was interested in emerging digital technologies, and I was particularly interested in emergency communications. My interest in emergency communications stems mainly from being right in the middle of the Tea fire in 2008. My wife and I used my business band radios to communicate as not only were cell phones not reliable at the time, the fire was so loud we could not hear anyone on the phone.
While I have indeed learned a lot about amateur radio with the help of people like Dave Milton, and have managed to learn a lot about digital technologies on my own, learning anything about emergency communications is difficult. I came into the club thinking that ARES was a function or SIG of the club. I also thought ARES did more than they apparently actually do. After two years in the club I still don't know what ARES actually does. I know they have a net on Monday and I have listened to dozens of them. But I have not heard of an ARES meeting, emergency communications class, or ARES exercise in over a year. And, to be honest, it makes me wonder how capable ARES is anyway as a group when some members have difficulty giving their own call phonetically. This does not make people want to stand up and volunteer.
On the other hand, I know of at least five other fairly new hams that are like me and came into amateur with an interest in emergency communications. We all scratch our heads and wonder who can tell us what we can do in Santa Barbara to participate. Calling for someone to lead is a good idea, but is there anyone who actually can? We can't overburden the few who already give so much of their time and expertise, so what do we do?
I myself would love to learn more about this. I know of several others that would love the opportunity as well. Andy, I know you mean well in trying to further emergency communications and agency cooperation but we need some ideas how to accomplish this. How can I as a member with an interest in this, but no specific training or experience, do anything? I don't have any interest in ARES, at least in it's present state, so what else can I do?
I have been following this thread with interest, but I have to admit it is over my head. I have never heard of most of the stuff you (Andy) are talking about. I know nothing about the County, or any other local agencies and how SBARC might cooperate with them. All I know is the little that W1UUQ has mentioned in passing conversation. I feel like I came in during the last ten minutes of the movie.
Probably 90% of the club is like me. Out of that group, there are probably a sizable number of people who are interested in emergency communications and serving others in an emergency but have no idea how we can do that. Before you check out of the discussion Andy, I for one would certainly like to hear you or someone roll it back a few steps, assume that some of us know nothing, and give us an idea for something we, as average members, can actually step up and do.