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Subj: Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2441 for Friday August 9th, 20
Path: IZ3LSV<I0OJJ<PI8ZTM<VK5RSV<VK2RZ<W0ARP<PY2BIL<PY2BIL
Sent: 240812/0801 @:PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM Sally 7.2.061  $:92657PY2BIL
From: PY2BIL@PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM

Amateur Radio Newsline Report 2441 for Friday August 9th, 2024
  
Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2441 with a release date of Friday, 
August 9th, 2024 to follow in 5-4-3-2-1.

The following is a QST. Hams play key roles during a landslide in southern 
India. The threat of severe weather cancels a DXpedition off the coast of 
Scotland - and a centenarian receives a once-in-100-years honor.  All this 
and more as Amateur Radio Newsline Report Number 2441 comes your way right 
now.

**

BILLBOARD CART

**
HAMS ASSIST RESCUE EFFORTS DURING SOUTHERN INDIA LANDSLIDE

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our top story this week takes us to southern India, where 
teams of ham radio operators are being credited with providing lifesaving 
communication that helped save lives amid the deadly landslides there. 
Graham Kemp VK4BB brings us that report.

GRAHAM: With the help of vital information provided by an amateur radio 
operator, rescue teams rushed to evacuate people from a region devastated by 
landslides that began in late July in the Wayanad district of the Indian 
state of Kerala.

A VHF repeater set up on the 3rd of August by the Sultan Bathery DX 
Association carried location, condition and other details to district 
officials as rescue efforts intensified using drones and radar. Hams relayed 
information to district authorities from ravaged communities after being 
asked by the district collector to step in and be a part of the relief 
operations. Led by Sabu Mathew, VU2ELJ, the association's chairman, the hams 
set up an amateur radio station inside the district collector's office in 
Kalpetta.

With some cellphone towers washed away by the landslides, mobile phone 
service was available only in a limited capacity, according to published 
reports.

A press release from the district collector's office said that many lives 
were saved because of the emergency network: Officials said [quote] Ham 
radio messages came to their aid and the rescue team members were able to 
facilitate their evacuation." [endquote]

This is Graham Kemp VK4BB.


(THE ECONOMIC TIMES)

**
FCC SEEKS .3 MILLION FINE IN UNLICENSED-BROADCAST CASE

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: In the US, the FCC is seeking a fine of .3 million from a 
New York City radio station that the agency said is operating without a 
license. We have those details from Kent Peterson KCØDGY.

KENT: Charging that he ignored an FCC enforcement action late last year, the 
FCC has amplified its sanctions against a Bronx broadcaster, imposing a 
penalty of .3 million.

The commission says that Johnny Peralta has been operating an unauthorized 
FM radio station in the Bronx for six or more years. According to the Radio 
World website and local media, his broadcasts as La Mia Radio on 105.7 FM 
are designed to serve New York City's Dominican audience. Having received no 
response from its previous enforcement action against him, the FCC has 
issued a forfeiture order, confirming the .3 million fine it is seeking. 
That fine was proposed last November in a notice of apparent liability by 
the commission. The notice followed the FCC's documentation of antenna 
installations through photographs and numerous field-strength measurements 
taken by field agents. The commission says the broadcaster did not respond 
to that earlier notice.

Enactment of the PIRATE Act four years ago gave the FCC greater powers of 
enforcement against unlicensed broadcast radio - and the ability to impose a 
higher fine. The commission does not collect these fines, however. That is 
the responsibility of the US Department of Justice, which it intends to 
contact within 30 days if Peralta does not respond to this latest action. 
According to the Radio World story, the FCC is confident that this is one 
case that might draw more immediate attention from justice officials because 
of the amount of the fine. It is the highest allowable amount under the 
four-year-old federal law.

This is Kent Peterson KCØDGY.

(FCC, RADIOWORLD)

**
SILENT KEY: BARRY KIRKWOOD, ZL1DD, ZL "STRAIGHT KEY NIGHT" FOUNDER

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: A well-respected and seasoned CW operator in New Zealand has 
become a Silent Key. We hear about his life and contributions from Jim 
Meachen ZL2BHF.

JIM: The love of CW was very obvious to any ham who got to know Barry 
Kirkwood, ZL1DD. On the air from his dream shack, Baz - as he was known - 
was a sought-after contact among ops on CW, especially for DX stations.

Baz became a Silent Key on the 30th of June in Chiang Mai, Thailand after a 
brief illness. Although he had lived in Thailand in 2006, he did not get a 
Thai callsign, operating first from the RAST club station in Bangkok, which 
had the callsign HSØAC. When flooding destroyed the station, Barry played a 
key role in getting super station HSØZIA on the air near Chiang Mai and 
often participated in contesting from there there.

He collected boat anchors but, as a CW op, he also loved his collection of 
Morse Keys. He distinguished himself as an award-winner many times in the 
NZART Sangster Shield QRP CW contest. After learning that the original 
Shield had been lost in the 1990s, he commissioned one to replace it in 
2017. Baz was a longtime member of NZART, a member of the FISTS CW Club and 
founder of the popular New Zealand Straight Key Night, which is held in 
summer and winter.

He also held the Cambodian ham radio license XU7AEL. The New Zealand 
callsign known so well among Barry's contacts was not his first. He had been 
assigned ZL1DR in 1953 and later was ZL1BN. After the death of a friend, 
Bert, who was the original holder of the call, ZL1DD, Bert's family had 
asked Baz to take his friend's callsign as his own.

Baz was 88.

This is Jim Meachen ZL2BHF.

(NZ NET NEWS, QRZ.COM)

**
SILENT KEY: CARTER CRAIGIE, N3AO, LEADER IN PENNSYLVANIA ENCOMM

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: An influential figure in encomm operations in Eastern 
Pennsylvania has become a Silent Key. We learn about him from Travis Lisk 
N3ILS.

TRAVIS:  Carter Craigie, N3AO, was all about service to amateur radio. He 
became a well-known figure in the Eastern Pennsylvania section of the ARRL 
where he played a major role in shaping the emergency communications unit 
for Chester County ARES, where he was its emergency coordinator from 2005 to 
2007.

According to Bob Wilson, W3BIG, the Eastern Pennsylvania section manager, 
Carter's design served as a blueprint for many other ARES units throughout 
the section. On the air, he was most enthusiastic about making CW contacts 
and operating QRP. According to his page on QRZ.com, he also volunteered at 
the SKYWARN Desk at the National Weather Service Forecast Office in 
Blacksburg, Virginia, where he lived most recently

Carter became a Silent Key on August 1st.

Carter was married to Kay Craigie, N3KN, who was Eastern Pennsylvania 
section manager in 1986 before she became the ARRL's 15th president in 2010.

Bob posted on the section website [quote]: "Carter was a man of many talents 
and was always a gentleman and friend to so many in the amateur radio 
community."

Carter was 86.

(ARRL EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA SECTION)

**
YOUNG HAM OF THE YEAR TO BE HONORED IN HUNTSVILLE

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: It’s time for Amateur Radio Newsline to shine the
spotlight on a very special YL this month at the Huntsville Hamfest in 
Alabama. Amateur Radio Newsline’s Mark Abramowicz (pronouncer:
Abram-o-vich) NT3V has the story.

MARK: The big day is almost here for Grace Papay K8LG, our 2024 winner of 
the Bill Pasternak WA6ITF Memorial Amateur Radio Newsline Young Ham of the 
Year award. Grace, who’s 18 and from Holland, Michigan, will be publicly 
recognized at the Huntsville Hamfest on Saturday afternoon, August 17th.

Grace is the daughter of Doug Papay K8DP and Carrie Papay K8CLP.
She’s the granddaughter of John Papay K8YSE – a veteran operator in the ham 
satellite community. Grace holds an Extra Class license, earned a year after 
she passed her Tech test.

Amateur Radio Newsline’s Don Wilbanks AE5DW will lead the Huntsville 
presentation team. A commemorative plaque and gifts from award sponsors 
Yaesu USA, Heil Sound Ltd. and Radiowavz Antenna Company will be given to 
Grace at that time. It’s going to be a busy week for Grace as she’ll be 
traveling to Huntsville from Cedarville University in Cedarville, Ohio where 
she will be attending a
freshman orientation program. Grace begins studies in electrical engineering 
there this fall. Congratulations and good luck Grace from all of
us.  You will become a "leading light" as you receive your award on 
International Lighthouse and Lightship Weekend.

I’m Mark Abramowicz NT3V.

**

BREAK HERE: Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio 
Newsline heard on bulletin stations around the world including the VK8MA 
repeater on Sundays at 7 p.m. in the Northern Territory of Australia.

**
FCC APPROVES SATELLITES FOR CELLULAR BROADBAND

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: The FCC has approved the launch of a low-earth orbit 
communications array of five satellites on V-band that is expected to open 
the door for US smartphones to make use of space-based cellular broadband 
services across the nation. The satellites have been given the OK to operate 
in the 37.5 to 42 GHz range for space-to-Earth communications; and the 
ranges of 47.2 to 50.2 GHz and 50.4 to 51.4 GHz for Earth to space 
communications.

Approval was also given for the use of 430-440 MHz for space-to-Earth and 
Earth-to-space transmissions, 2025-2110 MHz for Earth-to-
space transmissions and 2200-2290 MHz for space-to-Earth transmissions.

The approvals are granted to Texas-based AST Space Mobile  for what the 
company is characterizing as the largest communications array in history in 
low-earth orbit.

(FCC, YAHOO/FINANCE)

**
WEATHER HAZARDS CANCEL FLANNAN ISLANDS DXPEDITION

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: A DXpedition to Scotland's Flannan islands has been called 
off because of threatening weather. Jeremy Boot G4NJH tells us about the 
activation the team had planned.

JEREMY: Despite their best hopes and plans, a team of seasoned radio 
operators from the UK had to call off their attempt to activate the sixth 
most wanted Island on the Air in Europe, Scotland's Flannan islands group. 
The team said bad weather posed safety hazards.

The uninhabited islands carry the IOTA number EU-118 and are in the Outer 
Hebrides. The group is the second most wanted IOTA in the UK after Rockall, 
where one of the five Flannan team members, Nobby GØVJG, spent several days 
in 2023.

The Flannan DXpedition had been assigned the same callsign that activators 
used for Rockall: MMØUKI.

The team announced that the weather forecast compelled them to abandon the 
hoped-for activation, which was to have been calling QRZ from the 1st of 
August.

The team had already faced an earlier challenge - they had to replace their 
original vessel which had developed an engine fault. The boat's skipper 
later told them that the window for favourable weather was insufficient for 
him to retrieve them safely and they would therefore have to return home. 
They had planned to be on the air for 48 to 72 hours.

This is Jeremy Boot G4NJH.
 
(DXWORLD)

**
WORLD OF DX

In the World of DX, Gregor, S53RA is active from the Maldives as 8Q7GG until 
the 13th of August. He is operating QRP, holiday style, mainly in the 
evenings local time. He is using CW, SSB and FT8. See QRZ.com for QSL 
details.

Philipp, OE6MCX, is on the air until the 12th of August as 8P9MC from 
Barbados, IOTA Number NA-021. He is operating holiday style, using CW, SSB, 
FT8 and FT4  on 40-6 metres. QSL direct to home call.

Listen throughout August for stations with the suffix D-O-G as they 
publicize the poor state of stray animal care across many countries. For the 
International Dog Day, which will be marked on 26th of August, listen for 
K2D operating from various US states. See dogdayradio (dot) ORG for full 
details.

Listen for Seth, N4XTT, operating holiday style as J6/N4XTT from St. Lucia, 
IOTA Number NA-108, from the 10th through to the 17th of August. He will be 
using CW, SSB, FT8 and FT4  on 40-10 metres. See QRZ.com for QSL details.

Luca, IU3MDI  is active as ZA/IU3MDI [ZED AY STROKE EYE YOU 3 EMM DEE EYE] 
from Shkoder, Albania until the 17th of August. He is using CW, SSB and FT8 
on 40-10 meters.  See QSL details on QRZ.com

(425 DXBULLETIN, DXWORLD)

**

KICKER: FOR THIS HAM, IT HAS BEEN THE SWEETEST CENTURY

STEPHEN/ANCHOR: Our final story for this week is about the enduring power of 
amateur radio and the enduring love of those who have a license for it. Meet 
a YL who has achieved recognition, just as she turns 100 years old. Jim 
Damron N8TMW introduces her to us.

JIM: If you tried to add up the number of ham radio operators in North 
Carolina who either got or upgraded their license after an exam supervised 
by volunteer examiner Dorothy McCracken, you might find the mathematics a 
bit challenging. You might also find it difficult to total how many hopeful 
radio operators received her guidance as a volunteer instructor. 

Along with her husband, Lewis WA4MTY, who is now a Silent Key, Dot spent 
many years assisting those in the western Piedmont region who were ready to 
take their FCC tests and hopefully get on the air. According to her 
daughter, Janet, she also traveled all over the country with Lewis, giving 
license exams  where their presence was needed. Dot, who now has the 
callsign AD4D, knows well how amateur radio can make a good life even better 
-- at the age of 100.

Just days after reaching that one-century milestone in July, Dot received 
one more: she was presented with a plaque from the ARRL's North Carolina 
section manager, Marv Hoffman, WA4NC. The plaque was inscribed with the 
section's SUGAR award - an acronym for "Supporting, Upgrading, Growing 
Amateur Radio."

First licensed in 1985 as Extra Class operator KI4JM, she passed the 20 wpm 
code part of the test at a time when women were not always viewed as 
proficient CW ops. She not only mastered CW but went on to embrace portable 
operating, going camping with her husband and getting on the air.

Now, after all those decades, Dot has received the equivalent of a very 
large QSL card from amateur radio itself: The plaque that hangs on the wall 
of her room in a North Carolina rehabilitation facility: It's the SUGAR 
Award -- and how sweet it is.

This is Jim Damron N8TMW

(THE MOUNTAINEER, MARV HOFFMAN, WA4NC)

**
JUST SAY 'HI' TO HAIKU

If a good day of radio is like poetry to you, pick up a pencil and join the 
Amateur Radio Newsline haiku challenge. Share your experience by sending an 
original haiku to us here at Newsline. Use the entry form on our website, 
arnewsline.org and please follow the rules for writing your three-line haiku 
-- sorry but we cannot accept any entries that aren't written in traditional 
haiku form. Share with fellow listeners the poetry that is inspired by your 
ham radio experience!

NEWSCAST CLOSE: With thanks to AMSAT News Service; ARRL Eastern Pennsylvania 
Section; Amateur Radio Daily; CQ Magazine; David Behar K7DB; Economic Times; 
425DXNews; FCC; NASA; the Mountaineer; Marv Hoffman, WA4NC; NZNet News; 
QRZ.com; Radio World; shortwaveradio.de; the WRTC; and you our listeners, 
that's all from the Amateur Radio Newsline.  We remind our listeners that 
Amateur Radio Newsline is an all-volunteer non-profit organization that 
incurs expenses for its continued operation. If you wish to support us, 
please visit our website at arnewsline.org and know that we appreciate you 
all. We also remind our listeners that if you like our newscast, please 
leave us a 5-star rating wherever you subscribe to us. For now, with Caryn 
Eve Murray KD2GUT at the news desk in New York, and our news team worldwide, 
I'm Stephen Kinford N8WB in Wadsworth, Ohio saying 73. As always we thank 
you for listening. Amateur Radio Newsline(tm) is Copyright 2024. All rights 
reserved.


73 de Bill, PY2BIL
PY2BIL@PY2BIL.SP.BRA.SOAM

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
BBS: PY2BIL - Timed 12-ago-2024 08:01 E. South America Standard Time





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