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Subj: ARES E-Letter February 15, 2017
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From: CX2SA@CX2SA.SAL.URY.SOAM
To  : ARES@WW

The ARES E-Letter February 15, 2017
Editor: Rick Palm, K1CE

In This Issue:

2016 ARES Annual Report
Orlando Hamcationİ ARRL/ARES Forum
Hurricane Matthew Follow-Up with Volusia County (Florida) Emergency
 Coordinator
Excellence in Training: Seventh Annual New Hampshire ARES Academy To Be
 Held April 1
ARES and RACES in New Hampshire: Seamless Integration and Cooperation
DIY : Packet in a Bucket
Dynamic New ARES Group Forms with New Hams to Support It; Elmer Day in
 Nebraska

ARESİ Briefs, Links
-------------------
The ARRL Board of Directors, the League's policymakers, adopted five
legislative objectives for the US Congress, at its Annual Meeting last
month. Some are of special interest to the ARES community. The first
objective is to seek early congressional passage of the Amateur Radio Parity
Act of 2017, H.R. 555 and of any Senate companion bill that might be
introduced. H.R. 555 cleared the House on January 23. The implications for
emergency and disaster response operators, especially in neighborhood and
community-based organizations such as CERT and ARES, are profound in terms
of being able to enhance their programs and better serving their
constituencies.

Also, the League will seek recognition of the unique resources,
capabilities, and expertise of the Amateur Radio Service in any legislation
addressing communication issues related to emergencies, disasters, or
national security. More on ARRL legislative objectives here.

FEMA Region X Reports Another Successful HF Interoperability Exercise
(1/20/17); Ohio ARES Adds 6 Meters to its VHF Simplex Contest (1/13/17)

2016 ARES Annual Report
-----------------------
Recently ARRL Field Services staff have made a concerted effort to improve
reporting within the ARES program. The main objective was to use
information, submitted from ARRL Section Emergency Coordinators (which is
derived from monthly reports by Emergency Coordinators and District
Emergency Coordinators) to generate a basic report showing the value that
ARES provides to our communities, states and the nation through
collaboration with partners at all levels. In early 2016, the first basic
report on the status of ARES was released (see ARES in 2015, in the January,
2016, ARES E-Letter). The 2016 ARES Annual Report is now available. The
report features basic data drawn from SEC reports, a breakdown of ARES
figures by state and FEMA region, and a special challenge for 2017.


In addition to the annual ARES report, ARRL Field Services staff will also
be producing their own monthly report, to be published in the ARES E-Letter,
showing monthly data for ARES, as well as information about ARRL HQ
emergency preparedness and field service staff activities. Sharing
information about what ARES provides at all levels is critical to our work
overall, as hard numbers provide better detail about our work. We all need
to pitch-in to ensure that our contributions are counted, and here at HQ we
will be sure to do our part.


The annual report and monthly reports may be found online.

Mike Corey, KI1U, ARRL Emergency Preparedness Manager

Orlando Hamcationİ ARRL/ARES Forum
----------------------------------
The Orlando Hamcation was packed this past weekend, reflecting the overall
growth and health of the amateur service community in the country. The
weather was perfect for the mammoth outdoor flea market, and the big tents
were crowded with exhibitors and enthusiastic hams toting bulging plastic
bags of goodies. There were many luminaries in attendance: ARRL CEO Tom
Gallagher, NY2RF, and QCWA President Ken Oelke, VE6AFO, other notables such
as Bob Heil, K9EID, Carole Perry, WB2MGP, and Gordon West, WB6NOA, and ARRL
legends including longtime Southeastern Division Director Frank Butler,
W4RH, who at 92, drove all the way from the western end of the Florida
panhandle to enjoy the show.

The forums were also standing room only. The ARRL Section/Division Forum was
held on Saturday morning, with audience members overflowing to the outside
of the tent entrance. ARRL Southeastern Division Director Greg Sarratt,
W4OZK, and ARRL Northern Florida Section Manager Steve Szabo, WB4OMM,
summarized Division and Section activity respectively, with ARRL CEO Tom
Gallagher, NY2RF, discussing ARRL HQ plans and goals. Szabo introduced other
League officials including Southeastern Division Vice Director Joe
Tiritilli, N4ZUW; Southern Florida Section Manager Jeff Beals, WA4AW; West
Central Florida Section Manager Darrell Davis, KT4WX; and Alabama Section
Manager Jvann Martin, W4JVM. Many ARES members, SECs, DECs and ECs were also
present and introduced, preceding the lively discourse.

While discussion focused on how to gain more interest and attention of
younger people and hams, there was also discussion of Hurricane Matthew
responses, fresh from the monster storm that attacked the region last Fall.
After action stories and lessons learned were discussed. Comments from the
audience ran the gamut of interests, but the one comment that struck me the
most came from a member of the Lakeland Amateur Radio Club who said that the
club had faced declining attendance at club meetings and membership until
they eliminated the business portions of the meetings in favor of more
hands-on, show and tell demonstrations of equipment, modes and antennas,
which turned into big hits. Membership and attendance soared from a modest
33 members to over one hundred. That seemed to me a magic bullet that could
spur memberships and meetings attendance for all clubs and ARES groups.

The forum was all positive; there was no negative discussion, nor politics.
I enjoyed the forum very much, hosted by the always animated, enthusiastic
Steve Szabo, WB4OMM, who did a masterful job as MC. Put the 2018 Orlando
Hamcation on your agenda for next year. -- K1CE

Hurricane Matthew Follow-Up with Volusia County (Florida) Emergency
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Coordinator
-----------
I recently sat down for coffee with Karl Martin, KG4HBN, Volusia county,
Florida, ARES Emergency Coordinator to follow-up on issues identified in the
after-action report he filed on his ARES group's response to the massive
Hurricane Matthew hit on the county last Fall. Martin did an excellent job
of identifying lessons learned and action items to work on for future
incident responses. A few issues were of universal interest to ARES groups
across the country and struck me as especially salient: First, he indicated
"there needs to be more advance consultation, cooperation and coordination
with other volunteer organizations such as area Amateur Radio clubs, CERT
organizations, and active church groups for parsing of the limited number of
volunteer operators. Martin noted that many ARES volunteers are also members
of these other groups who ended up working for them instead of ARES with the
consequence that demand for operators outstripped supply for ARES.

Secondly, badging/identification must be provided to volunteer communicators
for access to sensitive locations such as shelters, and recognition by
officials there. Some ARES operators had difficulty getting access to some
shelters and in one case, volunteers were asked to leave.

Thirdly, there were no coax nor antennas found or marked at some facilities.
Having antennas and coax runs pre-placed, working and marked would have made
getting communication systems up and running more quickly and reliably.

In our chat, Martin said he had already followed up on the first issue by
editing the Volusia ARES (VARES) registration page to include fields to
identify the registrant's availability for ARES deployment as follows: "Will
VARES be the only group you will volunteer for during an emergency? Do you
have any other obligations? (This includes work obligations). Can you
deploy? Example: Shelters or field location."

On the second issue, Martin told me that it had been a struggle to gain
appropriate credentials from the county Sheriff's office, as the Sheriff's
policy is to limit such badging to the absolute minimum necessary. The
office has been tight-fisted to this point. Accordingly, it was at times
difficult to gain entry to area shelters (schools are used as shelters in
the county) without official badges. This problem carries over into the next
issue discussed, that is, the absence of, or presence of unmarked or
non-working coax and antennas in shelters.The county's schools serve as
shelters during disaster situations, and are turned over to the Red Cross
for management during such times. Normally, the schools are under the
jurisdiction of the county school board. It has been difficult to gain
access to the schools during times of peace, as budget limitations result in
no school staff available to supervise the ARES operators after school hours
for antenna and coax work. And like the Red Cross sometimes, it's difficult
to gain access to facilities and officials without official credentials from
the Sheriff's office. More work will need to be done to resolve these issues.

And lastly, ambient and RF noise in the EOC made for a challenging
communications environment at times. I chatted briefly with Martin about
these issues. A reader of Martin's after action report wrote a letter on
these issues, which was published in last month's ARES E-Letter.

I found Karl Martin, KG4HBN, to be an enthusiastic, realistic, intelligent,
and articulate Emergency Coordinator and I came away from our chat feeling
that our county ARES program was in good hands and had a bright future.
That's important, considering that Volusia County is more than a potential
ground zero for major disaster situations, as evidenced by last Fall's visit
from Hurricane Matthew. - K1CE

Excellence in Training: Seventh Annual New Hampshire ARES Academy To Be Held
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
April 1
-------
The ARRL New Hampshire Section has long been one of the most active in the
country, and has served as a model for public service communication
protocols and development. The section's annual NH-ARES Academy is no
exception, continuing that tradition of excellence; it's been effective in
recruiting and training new as well as veteran public event, emergency and
disaster communications operators for many years. This year, the training
program will be held at the New Hampshire State Fire Academy in the state's
capitol of Concord, on April 1. The program is divided into blocks of
training subjects critical to the development of ARES operators' skill sets.

The program will lead off with a presentation on Net Control functioning and
how to work efficiently in a net environment, taught by Assistant Section
Traffic Manager John Gotthartd, K1UAF, followed by ARES 101, an introduction
to the New Hampshire ARES program for new members, taught by Section
Emergency Coordinator Wayne Santos, N1CKM. Next, a new section for this year
entitled Signals Intelligence (SIGINT), taught by Dave Colter, WA1ZCN, the
section's Assistant EC for Training, introduces the concept and protocols
for gathering disaster field intelligence for the state's department of
Homeland Security and Emergency Management (HSEM) by monitoring other radio
services.

Message formatting, seemingly always in a state of flux within the ICS
framework, is a function that is at the core of the ARES mission, and will
be another topic presented, by ARRL New Hampshire Section Manager and
veteran traffic handler Pete Stohrer, K1PJS.

Hospital Support is another topic to be presented; New Hampshire's ARES
program provides support to all of the state's hospitals. Operating plans
and new protocols will be discussed by Merle Weber, KB1RJD, and the Hospital
Amateur Radio Program (HARP) team. From the HARP operating manual, "the
purpose of the [manual] is to provide guidelines, specific instructions, and
reference information necessary to connect, configure, and operate a HARP
Amateur Radio station in support of backup emergency communications at New
Hampshire hospitals during readiness practice drills and actual emergencies,
using analog and digital hardware and software for message exchange."

A discussion of Go Kit Basics will be led by Alan Bradford, AE1H, from
Southern Grafton County ARES, for new members and those needing to take a
fresh look at their go kit.

The critical importance of the ARES Mutual Assistance Team (ARESMAT)
protocol/concept was brought to the floor once again during Hurricane
Matthew when demand for disaster response communicators outstripped the
supply of ARES operators in many states. The academy's Introduction to
ARESMAT will describe how the program works to supply operators from outside
the affected areas in a system of mutual aid agreements, how to best use
ARESMAT resources, and for the individual ARESMAT-deployed operator: what to
expect, and how to prepare for deployment. This course will be presented by
Colter.

For newcomers to HF operation in the context of emergency and disaster
response communications, a course entitled HF for Emcomm, will discuss HF
antennas and equipment, temporary station setups, and operating in the
field, taught by Stohrer. An all new workshop course for students getting
started with the NBEMS digital messaging system will be presented by George
Blakeslee, N1GB.

A special course on WebEOC Training will be restricted to ARES members who
are regularly assigned to a municipal EOC, and recommended by their
Emergency Coordinators. The course will be taught by a member of the state's
HSEM staff. Presentations/courses on Winlink Express and the Winlink 2000
world-wide radio email system and an APRS technical workshop will wind up
the academy's curriculum. For more information and registration, contact
Dave Colter, WA1ZCN, Assistant SEC for Training, ARRL New Hampshire Section.

ARES and RACES in New Hampshire: Seamless Integration and Cooperation
---------------------------------------------------------------------
At the state level in New Hampshire, ARES and RACES are basically the same
thing. The state's Homeland Security and Emergency Management (NH HSEM) does
not maintain a standing RACES program, and uses NH-ARES to meet its backup
communication needs. In the event that circumstances require operation under
RACES rules, the plan is to mass-enroll as many NH-ARES operators as are
needed and volunteer at that time.

The reason for this approach is that under state law, the state must provide
Worker's Compensation Insurance coverage for all official volunteers. While
this was enacted to cover mountain search and rescue volunteers, it includes
all volunteers, regardless of role or agency. NH HSEM has no budget for this
at present.

Local municipal emergency management agencies may choose to enroll local
hams to be their RACES operators, and in these cases, NH ARES leaders
strongly recommend that these volunteers be drawn from the local ARES
organizations and that dual ARES/RACES membership be maintained. The goal of
this arrangement is to help head off any divisiveness between ARES and the
municipal emergency management agencies' RACES programs, thus ensuring full
interoperability. -- ARRL New Hampshire Section News

RACES -- What is It?

RACES, the radio amateur civil emergency service, is expressed in Part 97 of
the FCC rules, and is defined as "a radio service using amateur stations for
civil defense communications during periods of local, regional or national
civil emergencies." RACES is a government program, and ARES is an ARRL
program. From an ARRL website ARES/RACES FAQ: "ARES is activated before,
during and after an emergency. Generally, ARES handles all emergency
messages, including those between government emergency management officials.
RACES, on the other hand, almost never starts before an emergency and is
active only during the emergency and during the immediate aftermath if
government emergency management offices need communications support. RACES
is normally shut down shortly after the emergency has cleared." Check out
the FAQ for more on the distinction between ARES and RACES, and the
importance of maintaining membership, cooperation and coordination in and
between these entities.

DIY: Packet in a Bucket
-----------------------
As an ARES operator I frequently set up in the field taking along my trusted
to-go box. Most recently it was put to use for the Trump/Clinton debate in
Las Vegas, Nevada, and the Vigilant Guard Communications Exercise, in the
County Mobile Communications unit. There, the mission was to provide voice
and packet relay should the MACC (Multi-Agency Command Center) be unable to
make contact with distant stations. After the Vigilant Guard Exercise, the
local ARES District EC requested we bring our to-go boxes to an ARES
training session as a show-and-tell for newer members to see what was
possible. I needed a new one to show, after my box was broken. I headed to
the nearest home supply store to see what was available for a replacement.
Our ARES members have boxes that range from the higher-priced 19 inch rack
models, to tackle boxes and ammo boxes. After checking out the plastic
toolboxes as options, some with wheels, some having pull-handles and
stackable accessories, I decided to go with the utmost in simple: The bucket!

I bought a food grade 5 gallon bucket, along with a screw-on top, purchased
separately. The top is purchased with the screw-on rim that must be pushed
onto the top of the bucket where it is held on by friction. Total cost for
the three items: $12.00.

Inside there are 2 shelves. The top shelf is wood. The bottom is steel.
Prior to cutting the wood and metal it was necessary to create cardboard
templates. These templates were placed inside the bucket at the same time to
check for measurements to ensure the packet radio modem/TNC (Kantronics
KPC-3+) would fit in the space on top of the wooden shelf while the radio
was hung under it. The metal shelf was sized to allow an on/off switch box
to be placed under it while allowing room for the power supply, radio and
power distribution box on top. The Powerpole distribution box is placed
between the power supply and the radio. The radio and TNC remain plugged
into the distribution box. The red and black Powerpole connectors between
the radio and power supply were set so that either the power supply or an
alternate power source could be easily plugged in. This provides the input
to the power pole distribution box.

The components are held in place with 1 inch Velcro strips cut to each
unit's width. I placed the thin metal shelf under the power supply to mount
it using the original screws that hold the feet onto the supply. Measuring
and accurate drilling of 4 holes for the mounting screws made it an easy
installation. Quarter round wooden stock was used to conform the shelves to
the shape of the bucket. Shelves are screwed to the quarter round then
inserted into the bucket and secured to the bucket with screws from the
outside. I used a flashlight inside the bucket when screwing from the
outside to create a shadow, so I didn't miss the quarter round. The bucket
will be complete once I add the soundcard interface and weather proof the 6
screws on the outside.

The on/off lighted switch box under the power supply is connected between
the alternate power source and the powerpole distribution box. I used the
lighted switch to indicate power was coming into the switch. This allows me
to know when I've lost external power without having to dig my multi-meter
out of my toolbox.

Also inside the bucket I store a magnetic mount antenna, dual band handheld,
and the power cord to connect to an external source. I will be adding the
West Mountain NOMIC sound card interface in the bucket to use with an HF
system for sound card modes. It will mount on the side between the shelves.

The USB cable shown in the photo coming from the top shelf connects to the
computer. There is also an adapter cable to connect between the radio and
the antenna coax in the box, not shown.

Show Time

Upon arriving at the ARES training meeting and setting up my bucket packet
station at the operating position, it was pointed out that the bucket rim
can also serve as a place to hang microphones or handheld radios by their
belt clip around the lip of the bucket or on the wire portion of the handle.

Parts list: 5 gallon bucket; lid with screw in rim; quarter round stock
(enough to be able to cut 2 pieces for each shelf); quarter inch wood screws
(enough do to the job, I used 20); shelving material (wood, metal or
something else you find that works); water proofing for screws outside the
bucket (I'll use sneaker Goop); and, of course, the equipment you wish to use.

Postscript

Readers may wonder: why packet and not a sound card mode for our primary
and/or secondary digital mode? Answer: Three years ago, the ARES DEC for
Clark County, Nevada, W7HMV, asked me what I thought about packet for local
digital message handling. We tried it, and operators liked it. The packet
system was so successful a communication plan was created to cut down on the
interference caused by/to many stations on the air at the same time during
communications exercises.

The system was expanded: Through node hopping we can now link from Clark
County to Arizona, southern Utah, California, and northern Nevada. We
currently only have to use one digipeater for the Nevada-only system, which
we hope to replace in the future. (Nodes rather than digipeaters are used to
increase throughput speeds).

Packet is the digital mode used in the majority of hospitals in the county.
The hospital administrations have embraced this system and have their own
ham operators. If needed, we can supply ARES operators to supplement them.

Is packet slower than other modes? Yes, in some cases. Does it cover areas
not covered by faster digital modes? Yes. Is there a learning curve? Yes,
however, the mode is fairly easy to learn. Does it provide nearly error free
transfer of information? Yes.

Why VHF? First, VHF radios are already available with most hams. Secondly,
the cost of a TNC is lower than faster modems. Thirdly, the 2-meter band is
a universally common disaster response communications band.

The county emergency management agency has authorized our packet systems to
be co-located at public safety radio sites. The advantages are that these
sites have backup emergency power and are in secure locations. The sites are
on mountain tops (about 8000') allowing for more line of sight access to
systems in the surrounding states.

There are other packet messaging systems in the area. The Nevada Section
National Traffic System Digital Target station, KE7XO, provides a VHF packet
channel that creates an opportunity for local operators without HF
capability to enter messages into the NTS. Several Air Force MARS operators
are set up with amateur packet and are providing liaison services. All local
ARES exercises include Air Force MARS operators. Amateur and MARS operators
working together provide the only known digital messaging relay system that
will work in a disaster response scenario between Clark County and Carson
City departments of emergency management when the Internet and landline/cell
systems fail. Being flexible with various systems and modes makes operators
more valuable to ARES, RACES, NTS, NTS-Digital and served agencies. Nevada
is fortunate the different groups and agencies choose to work together. --
photos and text by James A. Bassett, W1RO, Nevada Section Traffic Manager,
w1ro(at)arrl.net

Dynamic New ARES Group Forms with New Hams to Support It; Elmer Day in
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Nebraska
--------
The Sioux City (Nebraska) area is unique--there are three states separated
by rivers just across from each other. There are three clubs in the
area--two in Iowa and one in South Dakota. Until last year, there has been
little activity on the Nebraska side.

All that changed when the Emergency Management Director of Dakota County,
Nebraska asked that the ARES program be rebuilt to support county emergency
communications needs. To fill the request, we needed more radio amateurs, so
it was decided to hold a Technician class as soon as possible. Several
Emergency Management and Health Department officials and others from as far
as 75 miles away registered for the class.

Thirty-one students started the classes, including the county sheriff and a
local police officer, held in the South Sioux City Law Enforcement Center
training room, with logistics support from the Emergency Management
Director. The net gain was 19 new Technician licensees with one passing both
the Technician and General class exams.

Elmer Day

Following up on the new hams' needs, an "Elmer Day" showcased a number of
stations set up by area hams to give our newbies and others the opportunity
to experience everything from kit building to HF to APRS to CW and much
more. We will also help them program their new radios, and otherwise get
them on the air and into our new ARES program.

Over the course of the past year, Dakota County ARES has become vitally
active and is receiving assistance in placing three repeaters in the county,
with plenty of hams to use them.

Most recently, 12 ARES members visited the National Weather Service office
in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, to learn NWS policies and procedures,
especially concerning SKYWARN, with our severe weather season looming. ARES
will take SKYWARN training soon.

Dakota County ARES held one classroom ARRL Emergency Communications Course
last fall, with 8 members who completed the program; we're planning another
for later this spring. We're also working on hosting the first in our region
ARRL (EC-016) Public Service and Emergency Communications Management
classroom course, as well. -- J.R. Reider, K0JWR, Dakota County, Nebraska
District Emergency Coordinator
________

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------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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members may subscribe at no cost or unsubscribe by editing their Member Data
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Copyright ¸ 2017 American Radio Relay League, Inc. All Rights Reserved



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