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N9PMO > LETTER 20.01.18 01:42l 594 Lines 27443 Bytes #999 (0) @ ARRL
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This second edition of the ARRL Letter is being redistributed due to a
layout error in the original.
ARRL CEO Tom Gallagher, NY2RF, to Retire
ARRL Board of Directors to Meet
The Doctor Will See You Now!
A Message to Members from ARRL President Rick Roderick, K5UR
Club Group Will Operate W1AW for Winter Field Day
Fox-1D Amateur Radio CubeSat Launches Successfully, Now Designated as
AO-92
Florida Ham Radio Club Aids Homeless During Cold Snap
Department of Defense Interoperability Communication Exercise Deemed a
Success
Registration Now Open for HamSCI Workshop
Past ARRL Great Lakes Division Director Jim Weaver, K8JE, SK
In Brief...
The K7RA Solar Update
Just Ahead in Radiosport
Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions
This second edition of the ARRL Letter is being redistributed due to a
layout error in the original.
ARRL CEO Tom Gallagher, NY2RF, to Retire
ARRL's chief executive officer for the past 2 years, Tom Gallagher,
NY2RF, announced his retirement as CEO, as the ARRL Board of Directors
prepares to meet January 19-20. He will step down on March 2.
Gallagher, who had earlier advised ARRL President Rick Roderick, K5UR,
of his intention to resign, expressed his gratitude to President
Roderick and the ARRL Board for giving him the opportunity to help
guide the organization.
"It has been my great privilege to serve in this capacity for 2 years,
and I am deeply grateful to the Board and President Rick Roderick,
K5UR, for their support and encouragement," Gallagher said.
President Roderick expressed appreciation for Gallagher's
contributions to ARRL. "ARRL is in a transition to a new generation
for Amateur Radio. Change doesn't come easy," Roderick said. "Tom
helped us in taking that step forward, and for that we are very
grateful for his service to the League and to Amateur Radio," he said.
Gallagher, 69, cited recent changes included in the new federal tax
law that made it unattractive for him to continue working in
Connecticut, where ARRL is headquartered.
Among Gallagher's chief accomplishments during his tenure as CEO were
creating an enhanced level of professionalism and efficiency in the
organization that represents more than 150,000 US Amateur Radio
operators. Gallagher also oversaw a significant turnaround in the
organization's financial performance.
Licensed in Pennsylvania in 1966 as WA3GRF (later N4GRF in North
Carolina), Gallagher is a member of the West Palm Beach Amateur Radio
Group. He has described himself as "an incurable HF DXer and
inveterate tinkerer" and credits his first visit to the Franklin
Institute's Amateur Radio station W3TKQ in 1963 for inspiring his
interest in ham radio. Amateur Radio led to an early career in
broadcasting.
Gallagher joined ARRL following 3 decades as an international
investment banker and financial services executive, succeeding
long-time CEO David Sumner, K1ZZ. Read more.
ARRL Board of Directors to Meet
The ARRL Board of Directors will hold its 2018 Annual Meeting January
19-20 in Windsor, Connecticut. The first order of business will be the
election of officers. The Board will elect candidates to the volunteer
posts of ARRL President, First and Second Vice President, and
International Affairs Vice President, as well as to the offices of
Secretary, Treasurer, Chief Executive Officer, and Chief Financial
Officer. CEO Tom Gallagher, NY2RF, has announced that he will retire
on March 2. The Board will evaluate and determine the next steps to
take in a search for his replacement when it meets this week.
The Board also will receive and/or hear -- and perhaps later consider
recommendations from -- a wide range of reports from officers, the
General Counsel, and committees and coordinators, including the Entry
Level License Committee, the Official Observers Program Study
Committee, and the Legislative vocacy Committee. The Board also will
hear and consider proposals to amend the ARRL Articles of Association
and Bylaws. It will consider the application of SKNAARS to become the
IARU member society for St. Kitts and Nevis.
The Doctor Will See You Now!
"Antenna Wire" is the topic of the latest (January 18) episode of the
"ARRL The Doctor is In" podcast. Listen...and learn!
Sponsored by DX Engineering, "ARRL The Doctor is In" is an informative
discussion of all things technical. Listen on your computer, tablet,
or smartphone -- whenever and wherever you like!
Every 2 weeks, your host, QST Editor-in-Chief Steve Ford, WB8IMY, and
the Doctor himself, Joel Hallas, W1ZR, will discuss a broad range of
technical topics. You can also e-mail your questions to
doctor@arrl.org, and the Doctor may answer them in a future podcast.
Enjoy "ARRL The Doctor is In" on Apple iTunes, or by using your iPhone
or iPad podcast app (just search for "ARRL The Doctor is In"). You can
also listen online at Blubrry, or at Stitcher (free registration
required, or browse the site as a guest) and through the free Stitcher
app for iOS, Kindle, or Android devices. If you've never listened to a
podcast before, download our beginner's guide.
A Message to Members from ARRL President Rick Roderick, K5UR
In the last few weeks, the ARRL's Board of Directors has been the
subject of an organized misinformation campaign. It is being
orchestrated by a group of hams, some of whom are well-intentioned but
have been misled. This effort, which consists of a series of
mis-characterizations, initially dealt with (1) the ARRL Board's
censure of an ARRL Director, and (2) some proposed revisions to ARRL's
Articles of Association and Bylaws that are likely to be considered at
the upcoming ARRL Board meeting and which were circulated by a member
of the Board. None of the proposed Article and Bylaw changes has yet
been addressed by the Board of Directors. More recently, other equally
erroneous and false statements have been made with respect to
completely unrelated issues, in an effort to draw into question ARRL's
decision-making processes. The principal suggestion is that ARRL
operates under some "cloak of secrecy." The criticism is unfair and
undeserved.
ARRL's representative system of governance, which has worked
exceptionally well in the advocacy and promotion of Amateur Radio and
the interests of ARRL members for more than 100 years, is unchanged.
And the legislative and other advocacy positions currently being
pursued are critical to the long-term survivability of the Amateur
Radio Service.
The ARRL Board does seek thoughtful, informed input on policy issues
concerning Amateur Radio from its roughly 150,000 members. ARRL's
governance structure provides that regionally elected, volunteer
Directors will represent the interests of the members in their
respective Divisions, working collectively and collegially within our
Board to make policy and to advocate their constituents' interests.
ARRL's Board members hold cabinet meetings and forums at hamfests and
conventions, and they staff ARRL booths at hamfests and conventions in
order to find out what interests and concerns you have as ARRL
members. They take this feedback from you, and they come to Board
meetings twice a year to make policy for the organization. They work
together collegially to develop the best policy decisions. This
structure presumes that the Board's collective wisdom is far greater
than that of any one Board member, and each Board member is obligated
by our Articles and Bylaws to come to meetings with a good idea of
what the members need and what is best for Amateur Radio as a whole.
As is the case with most large, national nonprofit associations, ARRL
Board meetings are not open to the public. It has always been that
way, as a matter of necessity. That is because, at all such meetings,
confidential issues such as spectrum protection, employee
compensation, financial information, and FCC submissions are candidly
discussed, and the members' interests at those meetings are advocated
by the Directors on a representative basis.
Unfortunately, it was necessary for the Board to take the highly
unusual action of publicly censuring one of its members recently. The
Board heard the allegations made by an ARRL member of what transpired
at an Amateur Radio event; it heard reports from other amateurs who
were there, and it heard all the information that the Director
involved chose to present. Everyone had a chance to speak and to
evaluate the presentations. The Board, in an 11 to 3 vote with one
abstention, took action to protect the organization's integrity based
on the information presented. This process and procedure are what
nonprofit associations have to be prepared to employ, and do employ,
to maintain order within their organizations and to ensure that the
interests of the affected Director are protected as well. This is not
a procedure that any nonprofit organization would conduct publicly.
ARRL Directors are volunteers. They are smart, dedicated radio
amateurs who each devote thousands of hours per year of their own time
to representing you as best they can. -- ARRL President Rick Roderick,
K5UR
The ARRL Policy on Board Governance and Conduct of Members of the
Board of Directors and Vice Directors has been drawn into question,
probably as the result of the fact that the Board's censure decision
was based upon a violation of that policy by the Director involved.
The Policy is intended to protect the democratic decision-making
processes by which ARRL has operated effectively for so long, and to
set forth principles to guide an organization's decision making and
the behavior of individual board members when acting on behalf of
ARRL. When it was adopted by the Board a year ago, it was posted for
ARRL members to read. The policy calls for honesty, integrity,
transparency, confidentiality, and equity. The purpose of adopting
such a statement formally is to provide employees, volunteers, and
board members with guidelines for making ethical choices and to ensure
that there is accountability for those choices.
When board members of a nonprofit adopt a code of ethics, they are
expressing their commitment to ethical behavior. It is intended to
protect the Board's deliberations and to protect the staff from
inappropriate actions by Board members. It seeks to preclude precisely
the type of selective disclosures and unilateral and subjective
characterizations of proposed Board actions that have happened
recently. There is nothing at all insidious about the policy, which is
subject to regular review and modification, as are all other ARRL
organizational documents.
As to the criticism of the proposed Articles and Bylaws changes, the
Board has not yet considered them. It may or may not adopt some or all
of the changes recommended by its Executive Committee or by an
individual Director. Any responsible Board of Directors regularly
reviews, amends and updates its Articles and Bylaws. And ARRL member
input is welcome on all such subjects. Indeed, the recommended Article
and Bylaws changes were not considered to be Board confidential. The
problem, however, is that it is not fair to members, or to the
representative Directors who have yet to evaluate them collectively,
to have the proposals mischaracterized or misrepresented.
ARRL Directors are volunteers. They are smart, dedicated radio
amateurs who each devote thousands of hours per year of their own time
to representing you as best they can.
To those who try to suggest that the Board has abandoned its
obligation to the members in favor of the organization -- you draw a
distinction that doesn't exist. The Board absolutely understands that
the members are the organization. The members of ARRL are always best
served by an informed Board that works together to make policy that is
in the best interests of the organization. The divisive tactics that
are being used now, commenced through disinformation and a lack of
candor, are harmful not only to the organization, but to Amateur Radio
operators everywhere, the good work of the ARRL staff, and the Service
that we love so much.
Club Group Will Operate W1AW for Winter Field Day
Maxim Memorial Station W1AW will host a group that will take part in
Winter Field Day later this month. Sponsored by the Winter Field Day
Association (WFDA), Winter Field Day will take place over the January
27-28 weekend, and it can be an opportune time to prep for ARRL Field
Day in June.
"Assuming the weather holds out, a group of hams will be here the last
weekend of January to operate W1AW in the Winter Field Day," W1AW
Station Manager Joe Carcia, NJ1Q, said this week. Headed by Frank
Gitto, KA5VVI, the group will consist of members of the Warren County
Amateur Radio Club (W2WCR) in New York. Gitto said the club is hoping
to have a dozen members at W1AW, operating in shifts of six. Carcia
said the Warren County ARC operators will avoid the harsh elements and
operate from indoors at W1AW, in the "home" station category.
For the hardier within the Amateur Radio ranks, Winter Field Day is an
excuse to get out of the house and enjoy the great outdoors, and --
let's face it -- it's not cold and snowy everywhere during the winter.
Gitto said that some Warren County ARC members will be operating WFD
from Indian Lake, New York, using special event call sign W2C.
The event, which got its start in 2007, is not restricted to North
America. There are three entry categories -- indoor, outdoor, and
home. The rules are similar to those for ARRL Field Day. Read more.
Fox-1D Amateur Radio CubeSat Launches Successfully, Now Designated as
AO-92
Right on schedule on January 12, the Indian Space Research
Organisation (ISRO) Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) launched,
taking AMSAT-NA's Fox-1D CubeSat and 30 other satellites on board
toward a sun-synchronous orbit. By 27 minutes into the flight,
confirmation came that all nanosatellites had been deployed. Fox-1D
was in orbit!
"At about 0517 UTC, the satellite came to life, and its antennas
deployed over the North Pole," AMSAT reported. "The AMSAT Engineering
team and Amateur Radio operators worldwide were watching various
WebSDRs for signs of life. Around 0525 UTC, the characteristic 'Fox
tail' of the Fox-1 FM transmitter was seen on multiple WebSDRs. Fox-1D
was alive!"
In addition to a Fox-1 U/V FM transponder, Fox-1D will carry several
university experiments, including a MEMS gyro from Pennsylvania State
University-Erie, a camera from Virginia Tech, and the University of
Iowa's High Energy Radiation CubeSat Instrument (HERCI) radiation
mapping experiment. This week the Virginia Tech experimental camera
payload returned some very clear photos of our planet as seen from
low-Earth orbit.
The PSLV launcher also carried the French PicSat, which includes a V/U
FM transponder.
The satellite will not be available for general use until the on-orbit
checkouts are complete. Read more.
Florida Ham Radio Club Aids Homeless During Cold Snap
Uncharacteristically cold weather in central Florida in early January
prompted members of the North Brevard Amateur Radio Club (K4NBR) to
assist the area's homeless population. The New Year began with a
bitter cold front descending upon central Florida, bringing
below-freezing temperatures, especially concerning for those lacking
regular shelter from the elements. NBARC members Ricky Deluco, K4JTT;
Robert Ortiz, KJ4VEH; William Klosowski, K4SVT, and Michael Ellixson,
KE4MWZ, set out in their own vehicles, searching the city of
Titusville for homeless residents. For the next two evenings, and
using Amateur Radio as communications, the group worked in the cold,
wet weather for more than 12 hours, logging some 120 miles on the
roads around Titusville.
The Disabled American Veteran Center in Titusville had opened its
doors as a cold weather shelter and offered a warm place to sleep and
eat. The ham radio group alerted local law enforcement, so they were
aware of the effort and in the hope that on-duty officers might also
reach out. The group was able to locate five homeless individuals on
its first evening tour of the town and provide them with
transportation out of the cold. Local police also contacted the team
to help and to provide transportation for other homeless individuals
located by on-duty officers.
One additional homeless person located late on the first night had a
need for immediate medical attention and was transported to a local
hospital. -- Thanks to Ricky Deluco, K4JTT
Department of Defense Interoperability Communication Exercise Deemed a
Success
A November 2017 Department of Defense (DoD)-sponsored communications
interoperability exercise involving Amateur Radio was a success,
according to information received from US Army Military Auxiliary
Radio System (MARS) Program Manager Paul English, WD8DBY. The November
4-6 drill, which focused on interoperability between DOD elements
including MARS, other federal agencies, and the Amateur Radio
community, simulated a coronal mass ejection (CME) event. Army and Air
Force MARS organizations worked in conjunction with the Amateur Radio
community, primarily on the 60-meter interoperability channels as well
as on HF NVIS frequencies and local VHF and UHF, non-internet linked
Amateur Radio repeaters.
The Amateur Radio portion of the exercise kicked off with a high-power
information broadcast on 60-meter channel 1 (5,330.5 kHz) from a
military station on the east coast and the Fort Huachuca HF gateway
station in Arizona. The high-power broadcast provided basic exercise
information and requested that amateur stations make contact with MARS
stations on 60 meters and provide county-by-county status reports for
the 3,143 US counties and county equivalents, in order to gain
situational awareness and to determine the extent of impact of the
scenario. Radio amateurs also were given the opportunity to submit a
reception report and receive a QSL card.
Registration Now Open for HamSCI Workshop
Registration now is open for a 2-day HamSCI -- the Amateur Radio
citizen science initiative -- workshop February 23-24 at New Jersey
Institute of Technology (NJIT) in Newark. The 2018 HamSCI Workshop
will be held in the NJIT Campus Center Ballroom. Complimentary parking
is available.
"The 2018 HamSCI workshop will focus on results of the 2017 Great
American Eclipse and the development of a personal space weather
station," said Nathaniel Frissell, W2NAF, Assistant Research Professor
at NJIT's Center for Solar-Terrestrial Research. "We are especially
looking for speakers with presentations showing analysis of 2017 Great
American Eclipse ionospheric observations, ideas and proposals for the
design and implementation of a personal space weather station. We will
also accept other presentations related to Amateur Radio and science."
Frissell expects that presentations will run between 20 and 30 minutes
in length. Contact Frissell if you would like to present and provide
an abstract by February 15. Presentations should be on any topic about
how the ionosphere and/or radio propagation was affected by the
eclipse.
Frissell said all hams and scientists interested in ham radio science
are welcome. "The aim of this workshop is to foster collaborations
between the ham radio and the space science and space weather research
communities through presentations, discussions, and demonstrations.
This year's meeting will focus on solar eclipse analysis, ham radio
data sources and databases, and the development of a 'personal space
weather station.'" Read more.
Past ARRL Great Lakes Division Director Jim Weaver, K8JE, SK
Past ARRL Great Lakes Division Director Jim Weaver, K8JE (ex-WA8COA),
of Mason, Ohio, died on January 14. An ARRL Life Member, he was 82.
Weaver served as ARRL Great Lakes Division Director for 11 years, from
2003 until 2014, and he was a regular presence at Hamvention® and ARRL
EXPO and moderated the ARRL Forum.
During his time on The ARRL Board of Directors, Weaver served on the
ministration and Finance, Programs and Services, and CEO Candidate
Screening committees. Early in his years on the Board, Weaver was one
of the initial members of the Hoc Committee on Grassroots Lobbying.
Within the Ohio Section, Weaver served as an Official Observer from
1997, and as a Public Information Officer from 1996. For about 10
years in the 1970s and 1980s, he wrote a column on Amateur Radio and
the public for the Cincinnati Enquirer, "Ham Call." Until recently, he
had served as an Official Emergency Station and an Official Relay
station.
Weaver was active in disaster communication and worked closely with
the Red Cross in Cincinnati. At the Great Lakes Division Convention
last October, Weaver was presented with the George S. Wilson III,
W4OYI, Lifetime Achievement Award.
Arrangements are pending. Read more. -- Thanks to Tom Delaney, W8WTD,
and Steve Ewald, WV1X
In Brief...
The theme for Hamvention® 2018 is "Amateur Radio...Serving the
Community." Ron Cramer, KD8ENJ, Hamvention General Chairman, said the
theme acknowledges the role that ham radio operators play in their
communities, especially in times of emergencies. "During recent
disasters, hurricanes in Florida, Texas, and Puerto Rico and wildfires
in the west, Amateur Radio operators were once again called upon to
provide emergency communication assistance when regular services
failed or were overtaxed," Cramer said. Hamvention is planning to have
forums on emergency communication and displays of Amateur Radio
emergency communication vehicles. Cramer thanked the many hams who
actively volunteer with community groups and thanked the public and
organizations for their support of Amateur Radio. Hamvention 2018 will
take place May 18-20 for the second year at the Greene County
Fairgrounds and Expo Center in Xenia, Ohio.
The NCVEC Question Pool Committee has announced some errors in the
2018-2022 FCC Element 2 (Technician class) Question Pool released on
January 8. These changes have been made in the download files as of
January 12: T1F11 -- Distractor A; change "They" to "The"; T4A01 --
Change to correct answer; correct answer is D; T5B13 -- Distractor A;
change "GHZ" to "GHz"; T6A07 -- Modified question. "What electrical
component is usually constructed as a coil of wire?" T8C08 --
Distractor A; change "VOIP" to "VoIP". ARRL VEC teams are advised to
check the NCVEC website regularly for updates to the Question Pool,
which may include errata and withdrawn questions. The new Element 2
Question Pool goes into effect on July 1, 2018.
The K7RA Solar Update
Tad Cook, K7RA, Seattle, reports: January 11-17 was a quiet week in
space weather, with zero sunspots over the weekend and geomagnetic
indicators rising only slightly. Compared to last week, average daily
sunspot numbers declined from 11.9 to 7, but average daily solar flux
went from 69.9 to 70.7. That seems counterintuitive, but these are all
very low numbers anyway, and any change is slight. Also, there are no
sunspot numbers between zero and 10 due to the arcane and somewhat
confusing way they are counted; the minimum possible sunspot number,
if there is any sunspot activity, is 11.
Geomagnetic indicators were quiet, with average daily planetary A
index moving from 5.4 to 6.1, and mid-latitude A index from 4.6 to
4.9.
Predicted solar flux is 71 on January 18-24; 72 on January 25-27; 70
on January 28-February 17; 72 on February 18-23; and 70 on February
24-March 3.
Predicted planetary A index is 5 on January 18; 8, 15, 18, and 12 on
January 19-22; 8 on January 23-24; 5 on January 25-27; 10 on January
28; 5 on January 29-February 3; 8 on February 4-5; 5 on February 6-8;
8, 12, and 10 on February 9-11; 5 on February 12-14; 20 on February
15-16; 18 and 12 on February 17-18; 5 on February 19-23; 10 on
February 24, 5 on February 25-March 2, and 8 on March 3.
Sunspot numbers for January 11-17, 2018 were 12, 0, 0, 0, 12, 13, and
12, with a mean of 7. The 10.7-centimeter flux was 70.8, 70.9, 70.8,
70.5, 70.2, 71.1, and 70.9, with a mean of 70.7. Estimated planetary A
indices were 2, 4, 7, 14, 9, 4, and 3, with a mean of 6.1. Estimated
mid-latitude A indices were 2, 3, 7, 11, 7, 3, and 1, with a mean of
4.9.
Send me your reports and observations.
Just Ahead in Radiosport
January 20-21 -- North American QSO Party SSB
January 20-21 -- Hungarian DX Contest (CW, phone)
January 20-21 -- Feld Hell Sprint
January 20-22 -- ARRL January VHF Contest (CW, phone, digital)
January 21-24 -- Classic Exchange (CW)
January 22 -- Run for the Bacon QRP Contest (CW)
January 24 -- SKCC Sprint (CW)
January 24 -- NAQCC CW Sprint
See the ARRL Contest Calendar for more information. For in-depth
reporting on Amateur Radio contesting, subscribe to The ARRL Contest
Update via your ARRL member profile e-mail preferences.
Upcoming ARRL Section, State, and Division Conventions
January 19-20 -- North Texas Section Convention, Forest Hill, Texas
January 20 -- GARS TECHFEST Convention, Lawrenceville, Georgia
January 21-27 -- Quartzfest Convention, Quartzsite, Arizona
January 26-27 -- Delta Division Convention, Jackson, Mississippi
February 3 -- South Carolina State Convention, North Charleston, South
Carolina
February 3 -- Virginia State Convention (Frostfest), Richmond,
Virginia
February 9-11 -- Florida State Convention (HamCation), Orlando,
Florida
February 16-17 -- Southwestern Division Convention, Yuma, Arizona
February 24 -- TECHCON Conference, Winter Haven, Florida
February 24 -- New Mexico TechFest, Albuquerque, New Mexico
February 24 -- Vermont State Convention, S. Burlington, Vermont
March 2-3 -- Alabama State Convention, Irondale, Alabama
March 9-10 -- Louisiana State Convention, Rayne, Louisiana
March 9-10 -- North Carolina Section Convention, Concord, North
Carolina
March 10 -- Nebraska State Convention, Lincoln, Nebraska
March 16-17 -- South Texas Section Convention, Rosenberg, Texas
March 17 -- Southern Florida Section Convention, Stuart, Florida
March 17 -- West Texas Section Convention, Midland, Texas
March 24 -- MicroHAMS Digital Conference, Redmond, Washington
March 24 -- Utah Digital Communications Conference, Sandy, Utah
March 24 -- West Virginia Section Convention, Charleston, West
Virginia
March 30-31 -- Maine State Convention, Lewiston, Maine
March 31 -- North Carolina State Convention, Raleigh, North Carolina
Find conventions and hamfests in your area.
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