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CX2SA  > ARES     22.06.21 18:07l 415 Lines 21098 Bytes #999 (0) @ ARRL
BID : 57897_CX2SA
Read: GUEST
Subj: ARES E-Letter June 16, 2021
Path: IZ3LSV<I3XTY<I0OJJ<N6RME<CX2SA
Sent: 210621/1325Z @:CX2SA.SAL.URY.SOAM #:57897 [Salto] FBB7.00e $:57897_CX2SA
From: CX2SA@CX2SA.SAL.URY.SOAM
To  : ARES@ARRL

The ARES E-Letter June 16, 2021
Editor: Rick Palm, K1CE

- Los Angeles ARES Northeast District Conducts Exercise,"Return of the
  Operators"
- eorgia's Northwest District ARES Goes Portable for Training Exercise
- Delaware Counties' AUXCOMM Exercise Simulates Rising Waters Response
- Silent Key: Roger Turner, W1ZSA, Eastern Massachusetts ARES/SKYARN, Town
  EMA Director
- K1CE for a Final: Field Day, Think Safety First
- ARES Resources
- ARRL Resources

ARES¶© Briefs, Links

The ARRL 2021 Hurricanes page is now available. It is also linked on the top
of the ARRL Media Hits page. -- Michelle Patnode, W3MVP, ARRL Social Media
Strategist

ARRL Field Day is right around the corner: June 26-27. Field Day is an
excellent exercise and training event for ARES groups. Some ARES FD groups
will be conducting operations at their local EOC: (Class F) Emergency
Operations Centers (EOC) is an amateur radio Field Day station at an
established EOC activated by a club or non-club group. Field Day Rules are
here.

The WX4NHC Annual Station On-the-Air Test was successfully held on Saturday,
May 29. The event helps radio amateurs practice sending meteorological
observations during severe weather incidents. This year, WX4NHC had six
operators working from home stations. WX4NHC Assistant Coordinator, Julio
Ripoll, WD4R, said "We feel that the on-the-air test was very successful,
especially as our operators were all working from home, using different
antennas and from different locations -- one of our operators, Ken Reid,
KG4USN, was located in Maryland."

Ripoll reported that although HF propagation was less than ideal, "we made a
total of 205 contacts on 20 and 40 meters, and 31 contacts on the EchoLink
VoIP Hurricane Net, including with several NWS and SKYWARNƒ?½ stations."
Ripoll reported a large increase in the number of Winlink message/reports
received, reflecting the substantial rise in interest in the data mode
hybrid RF/email network that has developed through popular training
exercises over the course of the past year. WX4NHC received 93 reports via
Winlink. "We made many contacts with Caribbean stations, such as Haiti,
Jamaica, and Puerto Rico, with the most distant contact being made with
Portugal," he said, adding "Surface reports from stations inside a hurricane
back to WX4NHC fill in gaps of data for National Hurricane Center
forecasters that can help save lives."

As of this writing, in conjunction with the National Hurricane Conference
this week, the traditional Amateur Radio Workshop sessions were expected to
be held virtually June 15, with moderators Rob Macedo, KD1CY, Director of
Operations, VoIP Hurricane Net, and Julio Ripoll, WD4R, Assistant
Coordinator of the National Hurricane Center's amateur radio station WX4NHC.
It is expected that video of the workshop sessions will be published on
YouTube.

The Atlantic Hurricane Season, which started on June 1, will likely be a
busy one for Hurricane Watch Net stations reporting ground truths in real
time for use by National Hurricane Center forecasters, and for SKYWARN
observers/operators. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) has forecast a likely range of 13 to 20 named storms (winds of 39 MPH
or greater), of which six to 10 could become hurricanes (winds of 74 MPH or
greater), including three to five major hurricanes (Category 3, 4, or 5,
with winds of 111 MPH or greater) expected. NOAA projects these ranges with
a 70% confidence level.

VoIP Hurricane Net Director of Operations Rob Macedo, KD1CY, announced that
the VoIP Hurricane Prep Net meets Saturdays at 0000 UTC. "The VoIP Hurricane
Net Management team is looking for net controls to staff the VoIP Hurricane
Prep Net on a weekly basis and for net activations for land-falling
hurricanes," Macedo said. - excerpted from ARRL News; thanks, Rick
Lindquist, WW1ME

Separate SATERN Nets Now Operational -- The Salvation Army Team Emergency
Radio Network (SATERN) launched a new SATERN International SSB Net on June 2
on 14.325 MHz. Net sessions will take place Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays
at 11 AM Central Daylight Time, in cooperation with the Hurricane Watch Net,
which has used 14.325 MHz for many years during its own activations. The
Salvation Army is an ARRL partner by virtue of a longstanding memorandum of
understanding. The Strategic Auxiliary Team Emergency Readiness Net has
established itself on SATERN's former frequency of 14.265 MHz. Read
background here.

Revitalization, Reorganization of ARRL Field Services Announced. Mike
Walters, W8ZY, who has been involved with field volunteers for many years
and is currently the Section Emergency Coordinator (SEC) for Connecticut, is
now serving as the Field Services Manager. Click the link above to read the
full story.

Los Angeles ARES Northeast District Conducts Exercise,"Return of the
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Operators"
----------
On May 31, the ARES LAX (Los Angeles, California) Northeast District
conducted its fifth Saturday Exercise - dubbed SatEx and themed "Return of
the Operators" - which was deemed a "smashing success." Assistant District
Emergency Coordinator for the Hollywood district, David Ahrendts, KK6DA, was
credited with devising a challenging exercise scenario that included
deteriorating conditions and focused on building an ad hoc network of
stations for the response.

Event and Out-Of-Area Traffic

The exercise began with a simulated earthquake at 0830L. Participating
stations sent DYFI (Did You Feel It) reports to the US Geological Survey
(USGS) and welfare messages to their out-of-state contacts through HF and
VHF gateways. Stations were encouraged to use the K6YZF-11 VARA FM
digipeater to connect to Winlink hybrid RF/email gateways AJ7C, W6BI and
K6IRF.

Hospital Message Traffic

At 0900 the hospital net commenced operation on the southern California
Disaster Amateur Radio Network (DARN) and stations with digital traffic were
directed to ARES 501 (local designation for an emergency simplex frequency)
to pass hospital traffic to the Medical Alert Center (MAC). No
infrastructure digipeaters were to be used, simulating deteriorating
conditions post-event. In an ironic twist, life imitated exercise with
conditions actually deteriorating on the 2-meter band after 0900! However,
without skipping a beat, stations affected asked for relays, and digipeater
operators and other stations offered to act as relays and digipeaters. Their
training kicked in and stations overcame adverse conditions effectively. See
diagram for a graphic look at the hospital network.

Hospital stations sent a list of check-ins, Hospital Status Assessments,
Resource Requests, and check-outs using Winlink. Beaconed Hospital Service
Levels using APRS were transmitted to the MAC station during the exercise.
The MAC station responded with acknowledgements and replies containing
simulated approvals and ETAs for resources requested. In some cases the
traffic was sent directly to the MAC; in others, stations coordinated
digipeats of messages through other hospital stations.

Challenges

¶ú Powering stations is an ongoing challenge. Solar panels and high capacity
batteries paired with low current draw devices proved effective remedies for
some stations.

¶ú Location. While some hospital stations enjoyed rooftop access, others had
to operate at street level, often surrounded by buildings. It was impressive
how the latter stations overcame their location challenges through
creativity and teamwork. Digipeating through other hospital stations, for
example, proved an effective remedy.

¶ú Antenna height and location. Several stations commented on field antenna
height and/or location as challenges at their sites. Mitigation suggestions
from those stations included trying different deployment systems, relocating
antennas and trying directionals going forward.

Successes

¶ú Operators are well trained and displayed excellent esprit de corps.

¶ú Traffic handling was effective in spite of challenging conditions.

¶ú Regular training and practice prior to the exercise helped overcome
in-the-field challenges during the exercise.

¶ú Operators acted in calm, collected, professional manners and worked well
together as a team.

¶ú Even without infrastructure, stations were able to pass traffic, building
an ad hoc network of hospital stations.

After-Action

Stations provided ICS-214 Activity Reports post-exercise. The quality of the
reports was extremely high and they fostered understanding of the challenges
at stations and how the operators overcame them. Some stations provided
written after action reports in addition to the ICS-214. A Zoom hot wash was
conducted with participants sharing their experiences. - Oliver Dully,
K6OLI, ARES LAX Northeast District Emergency Coordinator

Georgia's Northwest District ARES Goes Portable for Training Exercise
---------------------------------------------------------------------
"Dispatch a portable Winlink station and team to the Red Cross warehouse and
prepare to receive traffic" is a deployment instruction ARES teams in
Georgia could receive the next time there is an incident, so Northwest
District ARES members engaged in training to assess their skills in meeting
the instruction. The Portable Operations Training Exercise, dubbed POTe,
took place on Saturday, May 22, at the Georgia ARES Command Center in
Pickens County. The day kicked off with classes that focused operators on
completing tasks designated in the ARES Emergency Communicator Individual
Task Book.

The exercise was devoted to testing the skills of the operators with a
series of tasks and injects (problems/issues injected into the exercise to
be solved on the fly) for the teams to complete and address. More than 50
operators from nine county ARES groups participated in the POTe. Georgia
Section Emergency Coordinator, Frank Dean, K4SJR, said this exercise will be
rolled out to all Georgia ARES districts over the next several months. Dean
believes there are three main reasons exercises like the POTe are important:

1. Training and completion of the ARES Emergency Communicator Individual
Task Book.

2. Learning and improving skills on deployment as well as understanding and
completing tasks in the field.

3. Building relationships and learning to work with neighboring counties.
The morning classes were taught by members of the Mutual Assistance Team as
well as state and district emergency coordinators who are focused and
experienced on the subject matter presented.

Classes covered installing Powerpoles and PL-259 connectors, building a
dipole antenna, operating Winlink on VHF and HF, learning and practicing
with the ICS forms most frequently used and required, and  operating as net
control in an emergency or official activation.

The teams took their new skill sets over to their portable deployment
stations where they started with the simple task of transmitting an ICS-211
incident check-in form listing the names and call signs of the team members
present. The tasks then became progressively more challenging:

¶ú Send a Winlink message stating the number of functioning portable Winlink
stations your team currently has and how many VHF gateways you can currently
access.

¶ú Activate a Resource Net on the 70-cm itinerant frequency and send a list
of available operators to Command.

¶ú Dispatch a communications team with a portable Winlink station to the
mock fire station and prepare to receive traffic.

Adding to the challenge, the POTe command team also introduced a series of
injects to simulate situations that can and do arise when deploying for
portable operations. The injects included making the teams use the coax and
Powerpole jumpers built during the morning  classes as well as more
stress-inducing incidents like a tent or trailer catching on fire. The teams
also had to deal with not receiving Winlink traffic from Command and their
assigned frequencies being in use by ragchewers.

During the lunch break the teams were treated to a visit by the Emergency
K-9 Operations Search and Rescue Team. The dogs are training as certified
Therapy Dogs so they can comfort the families of missing persons and work
with children and adults facing emotional, mental, or physical challenges.
In a deployment, operators may see these impressive dogs and their handlers
working alongside the responding personnel.

When asked why it's important to participate in district-wide events like
the POTe, District Emergency Coordinator Felton Floyd, AF4DN, said, "This
exercise brought teams together who had never met other teams on a personal
basis. They got to know each other by working in skills classes and coming
together to complete a task. Without this we would just know the name and
the call from a net every week. This way, we actually built a relationship
on an in-person, face-to-face basis." -- Renee Conaway, KK4LOJ, Northeast
Georgia Assistant District Emergency Coordinator

Delaware Counties' AUXCOMM Exercise Simulates Rising Waters Response
--------------------------------------------------------------------
On May 22, the Sussex County (Delaware) AUXCOMM organization conducted a
multifaceted "outside exercise" involving amateurs from Sussex and Kent
Counties. The scenario was a heavy rainfall causing streams and ponds to
rise, presenting possible hazards. Mobile operators were dispatched to
simulate the assessment of water level data at assigned locations and report
it back to a central collection point. This exercise involved mutual aid
from outside Sussex County, thus getting play from the Kent County
ARES/RACES mobiles. After reporting their assessed data, the mobiles read
travel directions from a random local citizen to a "Rally Point," simulating
obtaining directions from a citizen who may not know the names of streets
and house numbers, but could give landmarks.

The exercise involved three types of operators: mobile stations, fixed
stations (to relay mobiles' information to the Rally Point) and the Rally
Point (where a portable station was set up). Mobiles were given a packet of
information outlining where each objective was located and what information
they were to gather from each location. Once this information was obtained,
the mobile gave the information to the Rally Point, or in the case of not
being able to reach the Rally Point directly, give the information to a
fixed station for relay to the Rally Point.

The participants exercised mobile VHF simplex operations, practiced
collecting and reporting simple observations, practiced operating in a net
and relaying messages, learned how to follow "local" directions based on
landmarks, demonstrated use of portable HF stations, setup a go-kit in the
field, and controlled a portable net without a computer. Since the exercise
was operated under ICS protocols, it involved following directions of an
Incident Action Plan (IAP), complete with an ICS-205 for frequency
assignments.

Lessons Learned

Demobilization was completed with a hot wash and networking among the
participants and leadership. Over all, the players performed well.
Participants proved that VHF simplex can work very effectively: simple but
valuable observations of conditions that emergency management  would need to
know can be relayed quickly, accurately, and efficiently by the VHF simplex
nets. This proved that newer hams that have taken basic training with simple
equipment can be a valuable asset in an emergency.

The portable HF antennas that were deployed did not work as well as
expected. The antenna used was a "twin ham stick" in a NVIS configuration
that the "home" stations could not hear. The band was noisy that day and may
have contributed to the problem, but VHF simplex, as stated, worked very well.

The Value of Networking

Exercises are valuable for the training aspect, but also for the
socialization and networking of the members so that when an incident occurs
requiring response, responders already know one another, and their skills.
The exercise gave the players a chance to put into action the knowledge they
had acquired in the ARES classroom. Nothing helps reinforce training more
than seeing where it actually brings everything together and it works. -
Jerry Palmer, N3KRX, ARRL Delaware Section; Mentor, ARRL Introduction to
Emergency Communications Training Course

Silent Key: Roger Turner, W1ZSA, Eastern Massachusetts ARES/SKYARN, Town EMA
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Director
--------
Roger Turner, W1ZSA, longtime Walpole (ARRL Eastern Massachusetts Section)
EMA Director and creator of Norfolk County ARES-SKYWARN passed away
recently. Turner was one of the originals who propelled SKYWARN in the
Eastern Massachusetts section to the next level, creating a strong group of
amateurs focused on ARES, SKYWARN and public service. Turner offered town
facilities for SKYWARN training, ARES workshops and as backup resources for
the Boston Marathon communications effort for many years.

Many hams credit Turner with getting them involved in Amateur Radio and
Emergency Management. Kelvin Mahoney, K1FPP, said "Roger was one of the main
reasons why I took an interest in the emergency management and
communications fields -- I took a CERT class from him when I was just 16
years old." John Robinson, W1JFR, said "Turner encouraged me to shift
careers in my 40s and our conversations about everything and anything
Walpole, communications or emergency management, could last for hours."

A "last call" for Turner was conducted on various sector RACES nets in
Eastern Massachusetts and on the Eastern Massachusetts ARES Net. The script
used for the last call can be viewed.

Many amateur radio operators, police, fire and other public safety officials
attended the wake as a proper tribute to Roger's memory. -- Robert Macedo,
KD1CY, ARES SKYWARN Coordinator, Eastern Massachusetts ARES Section
Emergency Coordinator

K1CE for a Final: Field Day, Think Safety First
-----------------------------------------------
I can't wait to operate a 2-hour shift at the Alachua County Communications
Center and EOC! Wishing readers a fun, productive and safe ARRL Field Day!
Here are some excellent safety tips.

ARES Resources
--------------
¶ú Download the ARES Manual [PDF]

¶ú ARES Field Resources Manual [PDF]

¶ú ARES Standardized Training Plan Task Book [Fillable PDF]

¶ú ARES Standardized Training Plan Task Book [Word]

¶ú ARES Plan

¶ú ARES Group Registration

¶ú Emergency Communications Training

The Amateur Radio Emergency Service¶© (ARES) consists of licensed amateurs
who have voluntarily registered their qualifications and equipment, with
their local ARES leadership, for communications duty in the public service
when disaster strikes. Every licensed amateur, regardless of membership in
ARRL or any other local or national organization is eligible to apply for
membership in ARES. Training may be required or desired to participate fully
in ARES. Please inquire at the local level for specific information. Because
ARES is an amateur radio program, only licensed radio amateurs are eligible
for membership. The possession of emergency-powered equipment is desirable,
but is not a requirement for membership.

How to Get Involved in ARES: Fill out the ARES Registration form and submit
it to your local Emergency Coordinator.

ARRL Resources
--------------
Join or Renew Today! Eligible US-based members can elect to receive QST or
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_________

The ARES Letter is published on the third Wednesday of each month. ARRL
members may subscribe at no cost or unsubscribe by editing their Member Data
Page as described at http://www.arrl.org/ares-e-letter.

Copyright ¸ 2021 American Radio Relay League, Incorporated. Use and
distribution of this publication, or any portion thereof, is permitted for
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