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CX2SA  > ARES     22.05.24 08:44l 470 Lines 25831 Bytes #999 (0) @ ARRL
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Subj: The ARES E-Letter - 05/2024
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To  : ARES@ARRL

                              =================
                              The ARES E-Letter
                              =================

Editor: Rick Palm, K1CE                                     May 15, 2024

- ARES© Briefs, Links
- Storms and Tornadoes: Amateur Radio Ready
- ARES Supports New Hampshire Red Cross (ARC) Eclipse Standby Deployment
- Letters: QRP is the Way to Go
- Keystone 6 -- National Mass Care Exercise This Month
- K1CE for a Final: NTS and ARES - A Symbiotic and Historic Relationship
Needed Again
- ARES© Resources

ARES© Briefs, Links
-------------------
The 2024 ARRL National Convention will be conducted with the Dayton
Hamvention© this week in Ohio. Attendees will have an opportunity to learn
more about how amateur radio is relevant and highly involved in the modern
emergency management landscape. ARRL Director of Emergency Management Josh
Johnston, KE5MHV, will host an ARES booth, which will be supported by ARES
leaders and members of the ARRL Emergency Communications and Field Services
Committee.

On Friday, Johnston and four representatives from the Cybersecurity and
Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) will lead the forum "ARES©, SAFECOM©,
and Building Relationships" as part of the ARRL National Convention track.
CISA is the federal agency SAFECOM serves. Together, they'll lead a
discussion about how amateur radio emergency communications groups can
establish and foster relationships with served agencies.

Johnston is ARRL's representative member of SAFECOM©. In 2023, ARRL was
elected to serve on SAFECOM©, a program of the US Department of Homeland
Security. SAFECOM supports the public safety community to improve the
emergency communications ecosystem. This relationship gives ARRL a seat at
the decision-making table for emergency communications policy nationwide.

"Amateur radio operators are in a unique position to serve agencies of many
different types, but that relationship has to be well established long
before a crisis," said Johnston, who emphasized that local partnerships are
just as important as national-level relationships. ARES groups work with
local, state, and county governments, and non-government affiliated
organizations, including local offices of the American Red Cross, the
Salvation Army, and faith-based organizations.

The forum will be held this Friday, May 17, at 9:15 AM in forum room 3,
where the majority of ARRL National Convention programming will take place.
The National Convention program is published at www.arrl.org/expo and in the
ARRL Events app.

ARRL has released two new courses to train emergency communications
operators for volunteering within ARES. Both courses are published in the
ARRL Learning Center. In 2023, the Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) revised the Guide for National Emergency Preparedness to specifically
include amateur radio. ARRL and FEMA entered into a new Memorandum of
Understanding in May 2023 that outlined the importance of trained radio
amateurs within the response ecosystem.

The 2024 Boston Marathon is in the history books - Monday, April 15, 2024
was the Patriots' Day state holiday in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and
with that holiday came the 128th running of the Boston Marathon. More than
280 amateur radio operators volunteered across the Start, Course, Finish,
and Transportation functions, and various operations centers -- including
the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) State EOC Unified
Command Center (UCC) and the Boston Athletic Association (BAA) Race
Operations Center (ROC) -- in Boston, performing communications duties that
included logistics support as a primary function and backup support for
medical and other public safety requests for the race as needed. Amateur
Radio operators were supporting the BAA, Red Cross and other agencies during
the event. This is one of the largest public service events Amateur Radio
supports in the US. - Rob Macedo, KD1CY, ARRL District Emergency
Coordinator, Eastern Massachusetts Section

Storms and Tornadoes: Amateur Radio Ready
-----------------------------------------
Strong storms and at least 60 tornadoes wreaked havoc in the central US for
nearly 2 weeks last month. On May 1, 2024, President Joe Biden declared a
major disaster in Oklahoma. ARRL Iowa Section Manager Lelia Garner, WA0UIG,
reported that in the state, they have moved from response to recovery.
Currently, nine counties are under the Iowa State Individual Assistance
Grant Program and the Disaster Case Advocacy Program.

Garner said "Amateur radio has served our local agencies well. We recently
networked at a central Iowa hamfest and are building our emergency
communications capacity primarily through ARES©." "The opportunity to share
our experience and knowledge gained in the field has been critical to
supporting ARES in Iowa," said Garner.

Garner added that awareness is the best tool. She stressed that amateur
operators and ARES members work to help the National Weather Service and
other served agencies in order to make their work and the community safer.

ARRL Emergency Management Director Josh Johnston, KE5MHV, agrees that
everyone should stay vigilant in their awareness and preparations, even
during periods of less activity. "Make sure you are prepared at home and
that your family has a severe weather plan. This is extremely important if
you plan to be mobile or away from your home during a severe weather event.
Your safety is the most important thing if you plan to be active during
severe weather. Every ham who is interested in severe weather should take
the SKYWARN storm spotting class offered by the National Weather Service,"
said Johnston.

He added that some of the most important aspects of preparation are
communication and building relationships. These activities, including drills
and exercises, need to be done during blue-sky days to ensure you will be
ready during days with severe weather. - The ARRL Letter

ARES Supports New Hampshire Red Cross (ARC) Eclipse Standby Deployment
----------------------------------------------------------------------
This was a group effort, with input from ARRL Section staff, multiple ECs
and members, American Red Cross (ARC), Department of Emergency Services,
State Parks and Lands, and the state's interoperability coordinator. The
mission we took on was in support of the Red Cross.

The Mission

Red Cross was asked by the state and towns to stage responders and vehicles
in Lancaster to deal with any mass casualty or sheltering needs in the
region. The premise behind our role in this operation was that cell service
would be clogged with calls, making it difficult for ARC teams to
communicate with their office and each other. The clogged network part
turned out to be real from about mid-day Monday until late in the evening.
There is good cell coverage in the region, but limited call capacity. ARES'
role was to relay deployment and logistics messages between the ARC office
in Concord, and the response teams staged in Lancaster if cell service
wasn't available.

Planning and Prep

The planning team included Section Emergency Coordinator Al Shuman, K1AKS;
Section Manager Pete Stohrer, W1FEA, Emergency Coordinator Erik Rider,
KC1FZB, myself, and others. Solid information was hard to come by in the
planning stage, partially because everyone involved faced so many variables,
such as how many day-trip visitors would make it to the north country, the
weather, crowd behavior, local capabilities, etc. Our plans needed to be
flexible. I made two recon trips in the weeks prior to the event to help
firm things up. The personal contacts and information that resulted were
invaluable. We met and talked with staff from Red Cross, HSEM, State Parks,
and DOT at various times as well as several operators in the Coos County ham
community. All were supportive of our planning and needs. Special mention
goes to the DOT Region 1 personnel in Coos County who went above and beyond
not only for us, but for all the emergency responders.

Former Coos Emergency Coordinator Bob Martin, KB1IZU, and I met and talked
during my first trip north. He provided valuable local insights, and made
sure both of his repeaters were up and running well throughout the setup and
operational period. Special thanks also to John Marcel, K1FDD, of the NH
Division of Forests and Lands, Bob Erskine from the Division of Emergency
Services, John Stevens, and State Interoperability Coordinator, for bringing
ARES into this event, and ARC Regional Disaster Officer John Montes.

One of the biggest problems was the logistics of putting ARES teams into an
area with no available overnight accommodations. That was solved by
operating from three self-contained RVs sited at NH DOT facilities. This
issue also forced us to limit the number of participants, due to the fact
that both RVs and space to park them were limited. We considered recruiting
local non-ARES hams to assist, but decided that might introduce too many
unknowns into a potentially high-profile operation.

Because the ARC office in Concord was the operations center for Red Cross
response, we installed a new HF station there with an IC-718, LDG tuner, and
a 53' end-fed antenna in the attic. We staged ARES teams in Lancaster at the
District 1 DOT and the Pittsburg North DOT garage, a few miles north of
town. The Lancaster team included two hams to respond along with ARC assets,
and one to be the link with Concord and Pittsburg. The Pittsburg team of two
was there to handle communications from the north if a deployment actually
occurred.

We built plenty of redundancy into our plans, because our knowledge of
coverage in northern Coos County was limited. In addition, it was a rare
opportunity to compare different long-haul methods and modes throughout a
single operation.

There were two communication paths to provide for: One was long-range,
between the two fixed stations in Coos, and Concord ARC. The other was local
communication between the two fixed Coos County sites and the deployment
team. Local communications were facilitated by the Clarkesville and Mt.
Agassiz 2-meter W1COS repeaters, which have overlapping coverage along Rte.
3 between Pittsburg and Lancaster. We also had a self-contained quick-deploy
cross-band repeater just in case a repeater went down, and plans to shift to
simplex operation if needed.

The link between Pittsburg, Lancaster, and Concord was the larger challenge.
I opted for a redundant multi-path approach, using HF voice, HF NBEMS,
Winlink, and FM voice via the Mt. Washington repeater. At the last minute,
we decided to add DMR to the mix as an experiment, which required a bit of
running around since two of our three fixed stations lacked DMR capability.

Operations

During the operational period of 7 AM to 7 PM, we conducted periodic tests
on every path so we would know which one to use if ARC was deployed from
Lancaster. HF voice was the least reliable, likely due to weak propagation
and compromise antennas. It further deteriorated from the beginning of the
eclipse until we shut down around 6:30. All stations were on shorter end-fed
antennas, and our signals varied. I could hear whispers from ARC, but W1FEA
with his full-sized antennas was quite usable, if not booming. Other
home-based stations were also quite strong at times, but no one was hearing
our field stations well enough for relays. It might have worked better if we
had more home stations participating as relays, but the response to our
pre-deployment request was light.

HF NBEMS worked almost 100% of the time, although late afternoon on Monday
we had to slow down to Thor11 on 40 meters. Eighty meters was good in the
early morning, but 40 meters was better through the daytime and early
evening. Our seldom-used original 40-meter NBEMS frequency turned out to be
the new home of FT8 and similar modes, so I moved us to 7.060 MHz, which
worked well until late afternoon Monday, when someone attempted to jam us by
sending random CW on top of the signals in the waterfall. He'd start a
second or so after the transmission started, and stop just after we stopped.
Later, he was transmitting some other digital mode and slowly tuning back
and forth across the waterfall on top of our signal. We ignored him and
dealt with the small errors it caused, but it's a future consideration.

The Mt. Washington 2-meter FM repeater was the clearest and most reliable
voice path. [At 6,288 feet, the mountain is New England's highest. - Ed.]
The ARC's base radio can't reach it, so Pete, W1FEA, was our relay from his
home. Al Bradford, AE1H, was our backup relay on both Mt. Washington and HF
SSB. We might consider experimenting with a higher-gain antenna for ARC's
station. Had the repeater not worked out, HF NBEMS would have been our best
choice. Earlier plans to have Mount Washington ARES members relay to a
Concord repeater turned out not to work well. However, we did have a phone
in the radio room, so messages could have been relayed that way as well.

Winlink didn't end up playing a direct role in the event, although both
Steve Davidson, NA1T, in Lancaster and Dave Colter, WA1ZCN, in Pittsburg
were easily able to connect to gateway stations. What we lacked was a known
monitored email address at ARC Concord, but that could have been solved
quickly if the need arose.

In addition, we had Twin State Radio Club's commercial VHF interoperability
radio set to VCALL-10 in Pittsburg to allow for communications with
Pittsburg Fire and others, but fortunately it wasn't needed. Had an actual
deployment occurred, it would have allowed more rapid coordination with
other responders.

The DMR experiment did work, but with a few problems. There were frequent
network dropouts (attributed to internet issues), and some transmissions
never made it through at all and had to be repeated. That caused a bit of
confusion. DMR audio can be difficult to understand under normal conditions,
and the network-related packet loss and dropouts made it even more
difficult. If we'd had to send a formal message over DMR, it would probably
have required multiple tries to get it accurate.

The Reality

The number of visitors coming north directly affected the timing of our
arrival on site. We anticipated the possibility of heavy traffic on Sunday,
but that didn't happen. We set up the Pittsburg station early Sunday morning
after an evening arrival on Saturday. The serious traffic started very early
Monday morning. In the end, Pittsburg, which was considered the best viewing
place, never really filled up with visitors. The crowd was large-ish, but
stayed mostly in the town center. A few hardy souls ventured north toward
the border. We later figured out that many, many thousands more people were
on the way up, but made too late a start to make it in time because of the
"funnel effect" of the road system. There is really only one good road from
Lancaster into northern Coos County - Route 3 - but there are many roads
leading north to Lancaster. Those roads were jammed all the way back to
Concord, and I suspect most folks ended up watching the eclipse from their
cars on the highways. Post-eclipse traffic was even worse, because nearly
everyone seemed to head south at the same time. The highways in New
Hampshire and Vermont didn't clear out until well into the wee hours of
Tuesday morning. We left closer to 6:30, and were finally able to get home
shortly after midnight.

Random Thoughts and Takeaways

This plan worked, as far as it went. It might not have survived an actual
deployment that extended into Tuesday.

Redundancy is good insurance, but takes a lot of equipment and extra work.
Working from the small RV dinner table with four radios and a laptop would
have been difficult if an actual deployment occurred.

Propane generators beat gasoline units for run time by many hours. Our
dual-fuel 2 kw unit ran up to 24 hours on a 20 lb. tank. We brought four
tanks. There was no place to refill in Pittsburg, just exchange, which is
much more expensive. In a pinch we could have switched to gasoline.

We gambled on not having an actual deployment, but if it had happened, we'd
have had to call in extra help. That wasn't planned for. You can never do
too much thinking and planning. Just remember to edit it down to something
readable and understandable. Building relationships with key partners makes
everything work better. -- Dave Colter, WA1ZCN, Assistant SEC, New Hampshire
ARES; Interim EC - West Central New Hampshire ARES

Letters: QRP is the Way to Go
-----------------------------
I saw your note about checking into a Florida net with just 10 watts. I
operate Army MARS and check into the local 8 AM net with 3 watts (with an
Icom IC-703) every day. It covers Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania, and
Delaware, and it works every time. I use a 180-foot random wire at about 35
feet.

Twice a month MARS has a liaison net with CFARS (Canadian version of MARS)
on 14 and 6 MHz and for this net I use just 9 watts to a trap vertical on 14
MHz. I check into SHARES HF nets every week also. Come vacation time, I use
just 3 watts to a rain gutter at a lodge in Virginia.

High power (QRO) is just not necessary. Put a good QRP rig in your ARES
shelter; it runs on a battery you can hold in one hand. Keep it charged with
a small solar panel and forget the Big Rig -- after a while you will give it
away. -- Scott McCann, W3MEO

Keystone 6 -- National Mass Care Exercise This Month
----------------------------------------------------
The 2024 National Mass Care Exercise, called Keystone 6, will be held in
Shippensburg, Pennsylvania on May 20-ð23, 2024. Preð-exercise activities
including logistics planning and movements, as well as training
opportunities have been occurring since March.

The scenario will involve large-scale impacts cascading across the region
and need for mass care services for more than 100,000 people. Pennsylvania
will be standing up a Commonwealth-managed shelter and activating
operational/planning mass care task forces for Feeding, Sheltering,
Disability Integration, Reunification, Household Pets, Distribution of
Emergency Supplies, and Housing. You can read more about mass care in
Pennsylvania.

In addition to the Shippensburg location, the American Red Cross Greater
Pennsylvania Region (GPA) will also be conducting simultaneous shelter
exercises in each of their 10 Disaster Response Areas (DRA).

The Red Cross EMCOMM teams in both the Greater Pennsylvania Region (GPA) and
the Southeast Region (SEPA) are extending an invitation to Amateur Radio
Emergency Service© (ARES©) partners and hams throughout Pennsylvania to
participate. This would involve providing simulated emergency communications
between the Red Cross's 10 DRA shelters in the GPA Region and the shelter in
the SEPA Region during the PEMA Sheltering exercise in Shippensburg.

There have been three pre-ðexercises leading up to next week's exercise. A
March 16, 2024 test was designed to help players get acquainted with the new
Red Cross EMCOMM Stations (RCES) throughout Pennsylvania. The exercise was
organized by the Red Cross EMCOMM Team, which invited all Pennsylvania hams
to check ðin with Pennsylvania Red Cross EMCOMM Stations using various VHF
repeaters. Hams were requested to check ðin with their call sign, name,
county, and noting whether or not they were an ARES or Red Cross volunteer.
ARES ECs were invited to visit the RCES before and during the exercise.

On April 6, an exercise was conducted during the ARRL Eastern Pennsylvania
and Western Pennsylvania Sections' ARES Spring SET. On May 11, an exercise
was conducted as a dry run for the actual Keystone 6 exercise.

The PEMA National Mass Care Exercise will serve as practice for sending Red
Cross forms via Winlink between the PEMA Shelter in Shippensburg and the
RCES locations, and pass some VHF voice traffic between the Red Cross
shelters and Red Cross RCES locations. ARES and club stations will also be
participating in the Winlink portion. -- Blair ARES Alert!, May 2024 issue,
Drew McGhee KA3EJV, editor; from information provided by Ed Majewski, Jr.
KC3NAF, and Joe Shupienis W3BC, ARRL WPA Section Manager

K1CE for a Final: NTS and ARES - A Symbiotic and Historic Relationship
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Needed Again
------------
In the early 1950s, ARRL HQ staff made an effort to consolidate the Amateur
Radio Emergency Corps (AREC, the forerunner of the modern ARES program that
exists today), and the new National Traffic System (NTS) conceived in 1949
from the prior trunk lines relay system that had been employed which led to
the creation of the American Radio Relay League in 1914. Under one
ARRL-sponsored umbrella to be called the Amateur Radio Public Service Corps
(ARPSC), the goals were to have the NTS operate daily, 365 days a year,
handling routine radiogram traffic during normal times. The AREC would
conduct occasional drills to develop operating acumen and maintain a high
state of preparedness. Once a year, a simulated emergency test nationwide in
which the AREC nets would become active at local levels to handle simulated
emergency messages and the NTS would provide both local and long-distance
record message handling in support. This required close cooperation between
these two divisions of ARPSC.

It's time to bring them back together. Let's just say it: NTS traffic
handlers were, and now with the ARRL's major effort to renew and
reinvigorate the system, are once again emerging as water carriers for
emergency communication systems and programs like ARES. These systems and
alliances allow for competent, accurate message handling across the country
when needed. Professionalism and quality management are the hallmarks of the
new system.

The NTS 2.0 Committee is working hard to raise the standard of operation of
NTS traffic handlers and the system that has enjoyed a long, symbiotic
relationship with ARES (formerly AREC). I got my start in organized amateur
radio public service in 1977 with the Boston area repeater net - the Heavy
Hitters Traffic Net - and the Eastern Mass Rhode Island Phone Net. I'm
looking forward to reengaging with the NTS; not only for the public service
opportunity it offers, but also for the pure fun of it, as enjoyed over 40
years ago! -- K1CE

Field Day

Dovetailing with the above opinion, this coming Field Day, consider Field
Day Rule 7.3.6. Message Handling: 10 points for each formal message
originated, relayed or received and delivered during the Field Day period,
up to a maximum of 100 points (10 messages). Copies of each message must be
included with the Field Day report. The message to the ARRL SM or SEC under
Rule 7.3.5. does not count towards the total of 10 for this bonus. Messages
claimed under this bonus must be in either standard NTS or ICS-213 format
(or have the equivalent content). All messages claimed for bonus points must
leave or enter the Field Day operation via amateur radio RF. Available to
all Classes.

Why not make the above a priority for your Field Day operation next month! -
Rick Palm, K1CE, Editor

ARES© Resources
---------------
Download the ARES Manual [PDF]
ARES Field Resources Manual [PDF]
ARES Standardized Training Plan Task Book [Fillable PDF]
ARES Standardized Training Plan Task Book [Word]
ARES Plan
ARES Group Registration
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.
Support ARES: Join ARRL

ARES is a program of ARRL The National Association for Amateur Radio© . No
other organization works harder than ARRL to promote and protect amateur
radio! ARRL members enjoy many benefits and services including digital
magazines, e-newsletters, online learning (learn.arrl.org), and technical
support. Membership also supports programs for radio clubs, on-air contests,
Logbook of The World©, ARRL Field Day, and the all-volunteer ARRL Field
Organization.

Join ARRL or renew today! arrl.org/join

The ARES Letter is free of charge to ARRL members. Subscribe:
www.arrl.org/opt-in-out

Find ARRL on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, X (@arrl and @arrl_ares), and
Threads

ARRL Store: arrl.org/shop

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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 at www.arrl.org/opt-in-out.

Copyright ¸ 2024 American Radio Relay League, Incorporated. Use and
distribution of this publication, or any portion thereof, is permitted for
non-commercial or educational purposes, with attribution. All other purposes
require written permission.

                   ****************************************
                   * Distributed on the packet network by *
                   * CX2SA <> 1978-2024 <> Salto, Uruguay *
                   ****************************************



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