ARRL

Register Account

Login Help

ARES Letter Issues

Preview
The ARES Letter
October 15, 2014
Editor: Rick Palm, K1CE
Ad

In This Issue:

 

Communications in Major Seismic Incidents in Central US Subject of Exercise; Report Cites Winklink, Amateur Radio

The Central United States Earthquake Consortium (CUSEC) was formed in 1983, and has received funding support from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and FEMA. The New Madrid Fault is a regional threat with national implications. CUSEC Member States are those most vulnerable to the effects of earthquakes in the region: Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, and Tennessee. Its CAPSTONE-14 initiative was a three-year, multi-state scope of planning and preparedness activities culminating in a major, multi-state earthquake Exercise in June, 2014.

In its after-action report, in a section on Communications, CUSEC recognized that a major earthquake situation could cut off conventional means of communication, and has emphasized the need for effective alternative communication technologies and capabilities for use when normal ones go down. Partners must be able to communicate with emergency operations centers and field locations for security, situational awareness and operational progress.

The report cited satellite communications as an alternate service, but noted they were costly to acquire and sometimes difficult and challenging to operate. "Other means of alternate communications include the National Warning System (NAWAS), and Amateur Radio (ham radio) operations," the report said, and referred to FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate's July comments on the resiliency and value of Amateur Radio. A "critical task" of the CAPSTONE-14 initiative was identified: "Utilize Amateur Radio assets to establish communications with local, state, federal and private sector partners."

One of the report recommendations was to "establish standards for various electronic resource request forms that meet the file size limitations of email and amateur band radio capabilities." The report noted that during CAPSTONE-14, states "initiated interstate communications utilizing Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Services (RACES) and successfully communicated via voice (audible communications), chat (text communications) and RMS Express/Winlink radio email system (email communications)." And "Winlink communications ultimately proved as a successful means to share . . . request forms," even though initial attempts were unsuccessful, due to file size. Operators implemented file size and compatibility/standardization fixes and initial problems were solved. The report concluded that "Regularly scheduled training and functional exercises conducted by RACES and MARS operators will improve speed and understanding during real world emergency operations." Click here for the complete report.

Winlink Administrator Steve Waterman, K4CJX, said "the lesson learned is always the same: essential is training by exercising the systems to be used in an earthquake disaster scenario." And, "this is why civil authorities are now incorporating Amateur Radio volunteers to assist with alternate communications methodologies, especially Winlink, and why MARS support of civil authorities is so important." Waterman added "Winlink 2000 is becoming more familiar to our civil authorities, and thus providing an opportunity for building strong relationships between these organizations and Amateur Radio volunteers. The rest of the story is up to us." - Thanks to Steve Waterman, K4CJX, Winlink Development Team

[The New Madrid Seismic Zone (NMSZ) is responsible for three of the largest earthquakes in U.S. history, during 1811-12. These quakes were felt strongly over 50,000 square miles and moderately across 1 million square miles, according to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). The affected area was therefore more than twice that of the 1964 Great Alaskan Earthquake, the largest earthquake in U.S. history, and approximately 10 times that of the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake. Although it has been more than two centuries since the last major earthquake along the NMSZ, the threat of a catastrophic earthquake in the region has not waned. Due to population density and current infrastructure, a similar earthquake today would be devastating.- excerpted from the report].

Top

Boulder County (Colorado) ARES Noted on Sheriff's Office Facebook Page

Jack Ciaccia, WMØG, ARRL Colorado Section Manager, informed the ARES E-Letter of two postings of the Boulder County Sheriff's Office to its Facebook page, reflecting the agency's value it places on the ARES group's support:

"Public safety is a cooperative effort that requires planning, training, and thoughtful resource management on many levels. We collaborate with many partner agencies such as fire protection districts, rescue groups and BCARES [Boulder County ARES] to provide the best in public service for Boulder County. Many partner agencies rely on volunteers willing to devote their resources to training, and event deployment. BCARES is a volunteer organization of licensed amateur radio operators that we can call upon for assistance. For more information on this volunteer organization visit: www.bouldercountyares.org."

"Scott Whitehead [KA0QPT] of the Boulder County Sheriff's Office received a Public Service Communication Commendation from the American Radio Relay League in recognition of his meritorious service in providing aid to an injured hiker July 21, 2014. The award was presented today by Jack Ciaccia, PIO for BCARES, the local ARRL organization. Scott heard an incoming dispatch call from a Colorado Springs area Ham operator relaying information on an injured party in a remote location. Scott has been a Ham operator since 1983. He used his knowledge of area radio repeaters to make radio contact with the Ham operator with the injured party, and guided rescue workers to their location. Great job Scott!"

Top

Ad
Letters: ARES Groups and Individuals Should Protect Passwords

The ARRL released a news article recently concerning the hacking of a server in the League's network late last month. That article can be found here. My professional background is in digital forensic investigations and includes teaching in the Digital Forensics and Cyber Security program at Valencia College in Orlando (Florida) so I'd like to make some cyber security suggestions to readers.

If your password on arrl.org hasn't been changed since before early 2010, you need to change it now. If your password is newer than early 2010, I'd recommend that it be changed as a precautionary measure. If you've utilized the same password on arrl.org and other websites, especially if those other websites are banking and finance related, you
need to change the passwords on those sites as well.

Hackers will use passwords from one compromised website to attempt to access the person's accounts on other websites. Ideally each website that you access should have a unique password; likewise, each email account you have should have a unique password.
Passwords should be made up of a combination of upper case letters, lower case letters, numbers, and symbols including: !@#$%^&*()_+=-.?<>,. (note: not all websites will accept all of those symbols in a password). Passwords should not be such easily guessed
things as the names of relatives and pets. The best passwords are random strings rather than names and words and should be 8 characters or longer.

Now the question that this immediately generates is how do I remember dozens or hundreds of random passwords? The answer is that you don't; you only need to memorize one that is a master password used by software that secures all of the information for all of your email/website accounts. There are many such programs available, both paid and free, that can securely protect your passwords on your home computer, your mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets, and on a flash drive so you can have them available wherever you are.

Because everyone's needs are different, I won't advise using any particular solution. I will, however, give you an example of a free solution for PCs that has also been ported to most other platforms. The software is named "Password Safe" and is available at no cost from: http://passwordsafe.sourceforge.net/ (click on the "Download latest version" found on that page to access the program itself).
http://pwsafe.org/relatedprojects.shtml has information on ports of
Password Safe to other platforms. Again this is not an endorsement of
this program, just an example of what is available.

One of the Motions I prepared for the July 2014 ARRL Board Meeting was for the creation of an IT Strategic Planning Committee. The committee would be tasked with examining the existing Information Technology operations of the League and creating a strategic plan for addressing current and future needs. The committee would be composed of Directors and Vice Directors having a current background in Information Technology. An edited Motion was passed, directing the Administration and Finance Committee of the Board to study establishing the IT Strategic Planning Committee and provide recommendations to the Board at the January 2015 meeting. I'll report back when I know more. -- ARRL Southeastern Division Director Doug Rehman, K4AC, k4ac@arrl.org

Top

Med Emergency in Washington's High Mountain Forest

On the last Sunday of summer--another beautiful, cloudless day at the site high in the central Cascade Mountains of Washington state--two hams had just fired up their station to prepare for a second day of contest operation in the Washington State QSO Party, better known as the Salmon Run.

About 0845, a motorcyclist rode into the remote camp. He told them that his friend had broken a leg in an accident just a short distance up the unpaved Forest Service road. He asked if the campers would please use their cell phones to call an ambulance. The hams explained that, unfortunately, they'd already checked and had no cellular service available at the site. They told him they did have ham radio communications, and would be able to get help through that service. The biker thanked them and rode back to his injured friend.

The contest team -- Robert Grinnell, KD7WNV and Tim Kane, K7ANE -- are both residents of the Seattle area, and members of the Mike & Key ARC. After three years of contesting together on the western side of the state, this was their first contest "expedition" on the eastern side of the mountains, where they'd situated their station on a score-doubling county line.

At the moment the rider approached them, Tim had selected a spot on 20 meters near the suggested contest frequency and was ensuring proper operation and tuning of the station. Robert was assembling a new tri-band yagi that they hoped to use later that day.

They quickly considered how best to obtain help. While the HF station was already in operation and chances were good that they would be able to contact someone somewhere, they knew that 9-1-1 systems are localized, and a distant party might have difficulty reaching the right agency. A local contact in one of the two counties could just dial 9-1-1 directly. They had VHF/UHF rigs in their trucks, but being from out of the area, did not have any local repeaters programmed. Robert had a few-years-old copy of the ARRL Repeater Directory along, but some listings would be archaic. That limitation, compounded with the time it would take to program each repeater, and the doubtful chances that someone would be using or monitoring a repeater at that time on a Sunday morning, did not bode well for quickly making a local contact.

They decided that Tim would stay on HF, and Robert would try for a local contact. After a quick check of the 75 and 40 meter bands, both of which were fairly quiet, Tim found the SOARA (South Orange ARA, Mission Viejo, California) net operating on 7200 kHz. He considered using "Mayday" or "Pan" emergency calls, but decided that "Break Break Break with a Medical Emergency" would be more readily understood.

After two calls, Louis Frank, KG6FCT, responded, and Tim had him move up 3 kHz, away from the net operation. Louis was at his home, east of Sacramento, California. Tim explained the situation, and Robert passed along detailed location information. They asked Louis to telephone the Washington State Patrol, or a sheriff for either of the two counties, and request that an ambulance be dispatched.

With contact made and the process underway via HF, Robert ceased efforts at a local contact, and they decided he should drive up to the accident scene, about a quarter mile distant. They quickly chose a 2 meter simplex frequency on which to maintain communications between them, with Robert on his mobile rig and Tim with an HT at the campsite.

Louis first tried his area 9-1-1 dispatcher, who said he couldn't transfer the call to the out-of-state jurisdictions. He then tried the 4-1-1 information operator, but only got administrative numbers that didn't answer on a Sunday morning, and just referred the caller to 9-1-1 for emergencies.

Tim continued monitoring the HF frequency. Having not heard their earlier communications, a Washington state contest station began calling CQ just one kHz up from where they were standing by, and was bleeding over badly. Tm contacted him, explained the situation, and asked him to please move up band a bit. In the best ham tradition, the station immediately agreed and moved.

Upon reaching the accident scene, Robert was informed that one of the bikers had managed to get one bar of signal on his cell phone, and had advised the victim's wife back in the Seattle area of the accident. She, too, was now working on getting medical help.

Through his persistence, Louis finally obtained a number for the Kittitas County Sheriff's Office (KCSO), which was answered, and he relayed the situation and request. As fate would have it, the victim's wife was on another line with the dispatch center, having just gotten through as well.

The KCSO dispatcher asked Louis for additional information about the accident, the victim, and whether the ambulance would need to be four-wheel-drive to reach the accident scene. Louis relayed the queries to Tim, who in turn asked Robert at the accident scene. They then passed the responses back to the dispatcher, and told them that 4WD was not needed. The victim was in pain but his condition otherwise did not seem serious.

Once KCSO advised that the ambulance was en route, Louis, Tim and Robert maintained the frequencies, in case further action was required or information needed to be passed.

Robert suggested to the motorcyclists that one of them ride down the dirt road to the highway, wait for the ambulance, and lead it to the accident scene, which they did.

About thirty minutes later an aid car from the Kittitas Valley Fire and Rescue Department drove by the camp to the accident scene. It was followed by a USFS brush fire truck and a Sheriff's cruiser.Ten minutes later a second Kittitas aid car also arrived.

At the accident scene the Emergency Medical Techs assessed the rider's injuries, stabilized his broken leg, and administered an IV. They transferred him to a gurney and into the ambulance. The emergency response vehicles then started their return to the hospital, some forty miles away. The motorcyclist who originally approached the hams came by the camp, and thanked them for their help.

By 0940, barely an hour since it started, all was back to normal. Tim passed the info and thanks back to Louis in central California. He returned to his SoCal net, while the Washington team returned to 20 meters and started chasing Qs for the contest. -- Tim Kane, K7ANE, and Robert Grinnell, KD7WNV

Top

Ad
Late October Exercise to Test MARS-ARES Interoperability

US Army and Air Force Military Auxiliary Radio Service (MARS) stations will participate in a 48-hour nationwide contingency communication exercise on October 27 and 28 as part of an effort to develop greater cooperation between the Department of Defense (DoD) sponsored MARS program and the Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES). MARS is encouraging its members to discuss communication interoperability in advance of the exercise with their ARES section and district or local emergency coordinators.

"This communications exercise is sponsored by the DoD to provide MARS operators the opportunity to develop and train interoperability procedures with their state/local ARES emergency coordinators and their Amateur Radio colleagues," explained Army MARS Program Manager Paul English, WD8DBY. He told ARRL that the DoD/MARS exercise has "full participation" from Army and Air Force MARS, and that he anticipates that some individual Navy MARS members may participate as well.

The plan calls for MARS members, using their Amateur Radio call signs and operating on amateur frequencies, to establish two-way communication with ARES leadership or members in as many US counties as possible by using VHF/UHF simplex channels or local repeaters or near vertical incidence skywave (NVIS) propagation on HF. "The contact can be with any amateur in the county, if an ARES member or leader is not available," English added.

"Ultimately we would like the MARS operator to join an existing ARES net, if one is operational during the exercise," English said. If no net is available, MARS members should come up on local repeaters or check into HF traffic nets to see what amateurs are available and to determine their counties. "We want to use existing net times and frequencies to the extent possible," English continued. "Any mode of operation is fine."

Only one ARES/Amateur Radio contact per county is needed, but more are okay. The contact must be person to person and cannot rely on Internet-linked repeaters, Internet connectivity systems, or store-and-forward e-mail systems, such as Winlink, English said.

The information exchange requested from ARES for each county is the county name and the county Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) code, if available.

There are two preferred windows of opportunity to conduct the interoperability exercise. These are from 1201 to 1800 UTC on October 27, and from 0001 to 0600 UTC on October 28.

Contact Paul English, WD8DBY, for more information. - Thanks to the ARRL Letter

Top

ARES Group Preps for Public Event with Emergency Exercise in Washington State

Amateur Radio operators on the Olympic Peninsula of Washington State encounter unique situations and terrain that we are expected to overcome in times of emergency. To prepare for such times the Clallam County ARES seeks opportunities to participate in community activities that allow us to deploy and communicate in support as practice and preparedness. We were given such an opportunity when a member of the North Olympic Running Club approached us about an inaugural trail marathon called the Great Olympic Adventure Trail Marathon (The GOAT), to be run the first week of September 2014. Our Training Coordinator, Kathleen Reiter, N1ERT was put in contact with the marathon organizer Lorrie Mittmann who provided an outline of the event, and her concerns about lack of cell phone coverage, and hence reliable safety and security communications.

The ARES Advisory Group was presented with the proposal and with

Operations Tent at Lake Crescent. (Seated L to R. Bill Carter, W7WEC; Dave Hannon, KE7TTT; Valerie Hannon, KF7VAL. Standing: Kathleen Reiter, N1ERT.) (photo courtesy KD7WBM)

their approval, a plan for our participation was presented to the ARES members at the monthly training meeting. To expand knowledge of the area and as a dry run for the event, the Clallam County ARES participation in the Washington State Emergency Department's statewide Fifth Saturday Exercise on August 30 became a tactical field exercise for us. Since our ARES operates under the auspices of Clallam County Emergency Management we were assigned Mission Numbers for both the exercise and the event. Information concerning road conditions, hazards and communications status were to be provided to them in the After Action reports.

The local scenario was a wild-land fire response near the town of Joyce, Washington. Deployment would involve some tricky driving on logging roads as well as overcoming the usual terrain obstructions. Although some reconnaissance of the area had been accomplished prior to the exercise, road and weather conditions had changed.

The exercise began with members contacting the Resources Net for check-in. They proceeded to a Staging Area at the Crescent School in Joyce, where they received their instructions and safety briefing for deployment. The IC was the Emergency Coordinator, Bill Carter, W7WEC. Assignments and maps were issued to the two person teams and Operations took control of the exercise from Resources. The teams were then dispatched to their respective locations.

Upon reporting their arrivals at their locations teams awaited net roll calls on repeater and simplex channels. When Operations found that they could not maintain contact with all of the deployed elements from the Incident Command Post, control was passed to the only station that could. The teams assessed road conditions, and reported locations and signal strengths to the net. All then returned to the Staging Area for the hot wash and were released to the Resources Net Control for final check-out.

Our findings were reported to the marathon event coordinator and necessary changes were made in planning for the event.

For the marathon, after contacting Resources, ARES personnel deployed directly to the locations they had manned during the exercise. David, KE7TTT and Valerie, KF7VAL Hannon opened the Operations Net to receive check-ins as members arrived on location. ARES members manned the Start locations, the Finish Line and all critical points along the trail where cell phone communications were impossible because of terrain. Aside from minor glitches, radio communications ran smoothly the entire day.

ARES members and the Amateur Radio community at large don't always recognize how positively the general public reacts to our presence. During the race, the runners expressed appreciation for our efforts in support of their activity. ARES members were readily identifiable with communications vests and radios, and our willingness to serve and demonstrated professionalism was not lost on event organizers. ARES was able to practice and become familiar with our unique geography and we feel confident that we will be asked to assist with similar events in the future. It is a "Win-Win" for both sides. -- Bruce Reiter, KD7WBM

Top

Ad
Denver CERT Volunteer Receives FEMA Honorable Mention as Community Preparedness Hero

A Denver, Colorado, volunteer and radio amateur with the Citizen Emergency Response Team has received an Honorable Mention as part of FEMA's 2014 Community Preparedness winners. FEMA announced the winners as they recognized individuals who have taken action to help prepare their communities.

David E. Cook, KC0MHT, a Denver CERT volunteer since 2008, continues to serve the Denver community as a trainer, facilitator and exercise coordinator. He has helped train more than 4000 people over the last several years and has been a volunteer in numerous emergency events and exercises, including the 2013 Colorado floods.

David was nominated for, and was awarded an Honorable Mention as a "Community Preparedness Hero."

"Strong emergency management requires teamwork, community engagement, innovation and strong relationships at all levels before disasters occur," FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate said. "This year, we recognize individuals and organizations that exemplify this approach, and I congratulate them on their dedication to make our nation stronger and safer." Denver is a safer, more prepared community, thanks to David's dedication and expertise in the CERT program. -- Denver Office of Emergency Management

Top

Indiana ARES/RACES Active in National Preparedness Month

See photo at right: ARES/RACES member Steve Kramer, KF9ZA, holds one of several ARRL brochures distributed at the Hamilton County Emergency Management tent during Public Safety Day at Westfield, Indiana's Village Park Mall on Saturday, September 6. ARES member and RACES officer Mike Alley, W9MSK (left), among others, promoted Amateur Radio as a valuable disaster service tool during the 6-hour event that included demonstrations by local fire rescue, police, EMS and other support organizations. The group demonstrated "off-the-grid" communications using a generator, a local repeater and simplex and IRLP capabilities, answering questions from the public drawn to the parking lot activity from their Saturday shopping. (KJ9M photo). -- Joe March, KJ9M, ARRL Public Information Coordinator, Indiana Section, Kj9m@arrl.net

Top

National Community/Neighborhood Exercise Series

The series of Formidable Footprint exercises for neighborhood, community and faith based organizations continues: October 25 - Solar Storm / January 31 - Flood / February 28 - Wildfire. Exercises have also been scheduled for the following scenarios: Earthquake -Hurricane - Influenza Pandemic - Tornado. The Formidable Footprint exercise series has been developed in accordance with Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program (HSEEP) protocols. The objective of the exercise series is for CERTs, Neighborhood Watch Programs, Neighborhood Associations, Community / Faith Based Organizations, Citizen Corps, Fire Corps and others to work as a team to become better prepared for the next disaster their community may face. There is NO CHARGE for participation in any of the Formidable Footprint exercises. For additional information and to register for up-coming exercises please access the following web site today: www.FormidableFootprint.org

Top

ARRL -- Your One-Stop Resource for Amateur Radio News and Information

Join or Renew Today! ARRL membership includes QST, Amateur Radio's most popular and informative journal, delivered to your mailbox each month.

Subscribe to NCJ -- the National Contest Journal. Published bi-monthly, features articles by top contesters, letters, hints, statistics, scores, NA Sprint and QSO Parties.

Subscribe to QEX -- A Forum for Communications Experimenters. Published bi-monthly, features technical articles, construction projects, columns and other items of interest to radio amateurs and communications professionals.

Free of charge to ARRL members: Subscribe to the ARES E-Letter(monthly public service and emergency communications news), theARRL Contest Update (bi-weekly contest newsletter), Division and Section news alerts -- and much more!

Find us on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter.

ARRL offers a wide array of products to enhance your enjoyment of Amateur Radio

Donate to the fund of your choice -- support programs not funded by member dues!

Click here to advertise in this newsletter, space subject to availability.

Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad
Ad
www.arrl.org

 

EXPLORE ARRL

Instragram     Facebook     Twitter     YouTube     LinkedIn