Building RACES in Lynn

RACES logoTerry Stader, KA8SCP writes on mras-leaders:

I’ve been asked by the [emergency management director] in the Town of Lynn to help him put together a RACES team. So I am looking to work with him on selecting hams that would be good candidates for growing this new entity within the community. Can you please send me the names and calls of any likely candidates you might have in your list of hams who can take the initiative in this role? Sure, I can go through the call book and search for hams in Lynn, but there is more to this role than just a name and call sign!

I have quite a few [emergency management directors] asking for assistance lately, much due to the recent Northeast Homeland Security Regional Advisory Council (NERAC) sheltering grant that included 2 FT-7800 transceivers complete with power supplies and antennas. I am hoping to get a list of all of the communities that got these radio systems and will share them with the group. This is another way that the EmComm side of Amateur Radio can reach out to the community officials and get connected with the local operation and become part of the total solution to a local emergency situation.

Please do not hesitate to contact me if you have questions or suggestions.

Thanks…. Terry

“The Fastest Women In The Country”

Boston ARC logoThe US Olympic Women’s Marathon Trials were held in Boston and Cambridge on Sunday, April 20, and ham radio provided medical and safety communications. An official 26.2 mile marathon course was laid out, finishing at the BAA Boston Marathon Finish Line near Copley Square. This was a rare event with national attention and all went smoothly. Deena Kastor, Magdalena Lewy Boulet, and Blake Russell will represent the US team at the Olympic Games in Beijing on 17 August.

The hams who participated were: N1NHZ, K1EP, N1OSG, KB1KUY, KB1OKP, WA1IDA, N1LAH, KB1HAD, K1NUN, KB1LPW, K1HU, KB1LYJ and KB1OHB.

Thanks, WA1IDA and Boston ARC SPARC, May 2008

EmComm in China, Keep 20 Meter Frequency Clear

Steve Telsey, N1BDA writes on PART-L:

From: WRRL [mailto:wrrl@cot.net] Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2008 12:07 PM
To: Undisclosed-Recipient:;
Subject: SPECIAL BULLETIN – ALL RADIO AMATEURS

TO: ALL RADIO AMATEURS
FROM: W7RRL – WORLD RADIO RELAY LEAGUE HQ
DATE/TIME: MAY 14 2008 1600 UTC
SUBJECT: CHINA DISASTER
REFERENCE: MESSAGES BELOW

PLEASE PASS THIS BULLETIN TO ALL RADIO AMATEURS ASAP:

Please do not use 14.270 MHz for the time being. It is being used for relief efforts in China.

——— Forwarded Message ———-

A Magnitude 7.8 earthquake hit Sichuan, China on Monday, May 12, 2008 at 06:28:04 UTC. Casualties and loss unknown up to now. According to Chinese Radio Sports Association, 14.270, 7.050 and 7.060 MHz are reserved for amateur radio emergency service in the rescue.

A group of radio amateurs is now transmitting from Wenchuan, the center of quake. Their signal is reported to be very weak. They tried to keep communication with BY8AA in Chengdu, seeking for all resources needed. During a contact finished a few minutes ago, they were asking for raincoats, water, tents, and outdoor living facilities.

Please spread this message as far as you can and keep the frequencies clear for emergency use. Thank you.

Michael Chen, BD5RV/4

Minuteman Repeater Assocation To Sponsor Talk-in for Boxboro

MMRA logoBob DeMattia, K1IW writes:

[The Minuteman Repeater Association] will be sponsoring talk-in for the ARRL New England Convention on August 22, 23, and 24. This is a great event stock full of commercial vendors, flea market sellers, and interesting speakers. The event also sponsors the special event station W1A and a number of other activities.

The pre-registration for this event has just opened. To buy tickets or just learn more, visit their website at http://www.boxboro.org.

I hope we’ll be “talking you in!”

73,
Bob – K1IW
President, MMRA

New Threat to 440 MHz Band?

Chris Smith, K1CJS writes:

In what our Section Manager Art Greenberg will say is in the interest of amateur radio, I have a news item of some small importance here, please alert your club personnel and publish this news in your club newsletters and on your club websites.

We hams are having to put up with a loss of our ability to use the 440 mhz band in this area because of the Pave Paws installation here, but now there comes another threat to our use of this band–nationwide. It seems that a commercial concern has applied for a waiver to utilize these frequencies for incidental control of a remote controlled surveillance ‘robot’. I’m including the released information here–please make your comments known to the FCC.

A situation like this led to our loss of part of the 220 mhz band to a commercial package carrier–who ultimately gave up on using the allocation, and now the remaining 220 mhz band is hardly used at all–the ham manufacturers don’t really make radios for the 220 mhz band anymore. It can be argued that we don’t want to lose the 440 mhz band in a similar manner. Even though this waiver spells out use only at isolated incidents along with other restrictions, how long would it be until a waiver application was made to remove the restrictions?

It may well be worth our while to send notice to the FCC that this doesn’t sit well with us–the amateur community, and that other similar frequencies are available or may soon be available that would better suit this type application.

Please help spread the word–and help protect our band allocations.

73,

Chris J Smith, K1CJS

Eastern Mass. Affiliated Clubs Coordinator

_________________

PUBLIC NOTICE

Federal Communications Commission
445 12th St., S.W. Washington, D.C. 20554
News Media Information 202 / 418-0500
Internet: http://www.fcc.gov
TTY: 1-888-835-5322 DA 08-1077

Released: May 6, 2008

WIRELESS TELECOMMUNICATIONS BUREAU AND PUBLIC SAFETY AND HOMELAND SECURITY BUREAU SEEK COMMENT ON REQUEST FOR WAIVER BY RECONROBOTICS, INC. TO ALLOW CERTIFICATION AND USE OF REMOTE-CONTROLLED SURVEILLANCE ROBOT OPERATING AT 430-448 MHz

WP Docket No. 08-63
Comment Date: May 27, 2008
Reply Date: June 6, 2008

The complete text can be found at:

http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-08-1077A1.txt

Red Cross Mobile EOC On Display

Red Cross Mobile EOC/van, photo 1N1UEC posted next to Red Cross Mobile EOC/van, photo 2A “next generation” American Red Cross mobile Emergency Operations Center (EOC) was on display last month at the State EOC in Framingham. The van features numerous computer and communications systems, including commercial satellite, 800 MHz trunking, conventional amateur VHF/UHF, and EchoLink and IRLP. The mobile EOC can act as a “network hub” to which other systems can connect.

Shown here: (left), one of the operating positions; (right), Lou Harris, N1UEC standing next to the mobile EOC

“A Successful Journey for Multiple Sclerosis”

Boston ARC logoThe guideline for walks sponsored by the Multiple Sclerosis Society is “MS stops people from moving.” On Saturday, April 5 more than 200 walkers (many more than expected) had rave reviews for the management of the walk and the new venue in Newton. The Boston Amateur Radio Club coordinated safety communications support for the MS Journey of Hope with the gratitude of the MS Society.

Assisting were: KB1JKJ, N1RGM, KB1MVJ, KB1MVC, N1TB, WA1IDA, KB1MGD, KB1LPW, N1LAH, and KB1LYJ.

Thanks, WA1IDA and Boston ARC Sparc, May 2008

2008 Eastern MA Field Day Pages Now On-line

2008 ARRL Field Day logoThe Eastern Massachusetts ARRL section web site contains some of the most comprehensive Field Day resource pages of its kind! Maintained by Bill Ricker, N1VUX, the Field Day pages offer detailed information on individual field day club operations, and much more:

* Hints and suggestions for Safety Officers
* Weather safety
* ICS/FD discussion
* 2008 Logo
* Rules changes
* Previous year’s scores
* Latitude and longitude coordinates
* Links to Google Maps for street maps
* Section staff tour plans
* Past site maps and tour-maps linked and preserved, with old logos

Please check your club’s listings. If you have new information, or can confirm last year’s information as current, please email N1VUX at bill.n1vux at gmail dot com. Also, if you have scores (or pictures) from previous years that are not shown (or linked) for your organization, please send that, too.

SKYWARN Training, Boston, May 17, 2008

SKYWARN logoBill Ricker, N1VUX writes on wara64 list:

As usual, the final training session of the spring is as close to the Hub as I can get it. Skywarn Training returns to the Museum Of Science Theater. Free Validated parking. I for one intend to walk through the cold front demonstration, it wasn’t up yet the last time we were there.

wx1box.org + weather.gov/box

Check out the 2008 Skywarn Training Schedule!

http://www.erh.noaa.gov/box/skywarnTraining.shtml

( a few other dates remain between now and …)

Sat May 17 2008
Boston Suffolk Co MA
**Museum of Science**
1 Science Park (Cambridge/Boston line dam)
Cahners Theater,Blue Wing, Level 2
*Bring parking ticket and it will be validated.
1 – 4 PM


Bill
n1vux@arrl.net bill.n1vux@gmail.com

Red Cross Tech Class in Brockton

Members of the Norwood Amateur Radio Club in conjunction with the American Red Cross are teaching an eight-week Technician class license course at the Brockton Chapter of the American Red Cross. The course started three weeks ago. The Norwood ARC is also supplying its VE team to conduct an exam session at the conclusion of the course.

Thanks, Norwood ARC newsletter, March, 2008

Cape Cod Traffic Plan Exercise

Hello to all…

The following RACES exercise information came from Bob Mims-WA1OEZ:

Mass. State Police, Mass. Highway, MEMA, VOAD, and several Cape Cod communities will be conducting a hurricane drill to exercise the new Cape Cod Emergency Traffic Plan (CCETP).

As part of this exercise the Region II manager has asked us to open the Region II RACES Network on Tuesday evening, May 13th, leading up to the main exercise day on Wed. May 14TH 2008. We will open all four Region II RACES Nets at 7:00 pm and will have exercise traffic for any and all Region II communities that wish to participate

For further information contact Bob Mims, WA1OEZ, Region II RACES Radio Officer at 508-823-7443 or wa1oez@arrl.net

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Reminder: Monthly ARES Net for May

Hello to all…

A reminder that the monthly ARES Net for May is rapidly approaching. The monthly ARES Net for May is Monday May 5th, 2008, at 8:30 PM on the MMRA Repeater system. This is after the RACES Nets earlier in the evening.

Make the first Monday of the month, “Emergency Communications Night” and check into your local RACES Net and then check into the ARES Net on the MMRA Repeater System. We look forward to your participation and remember, we are always looking for Net Controls to run the ARES Net.

We will have several interesting announcements for the net that evening and we look forward to everyone’s participation. Updates will be posted via email and on the Eastern Massachusetts ARES Web Site at http://ares.ema.arrl.org

Thanks for your continued support of ARES!
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New England Area Flea Markets, May 1, 2008

New England Area   Ham - Electronic  Flea Market  ***  DATES  *** 2008 P 1 of 2
All events are Ham Radio/ Electronic related except ~_____~
*******************************************************************************
2008 Contact Source
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2-3 May Deerfield NH NearFest @FG Mike K1TWF 978 250 1235 W

3-4 May Wakefield MA Photographica @AmericalCtr ~photo~ John 781 592 2553 W

10 May Rensselaer NY EGARA @FireCo $5@8 $5/sp@6 Thomas KC2FCP 518 272 1494 W

18 May Cambridge MA FLEA at MIT Nick 617 253 3776
Third Sunday April thru October

24 May Vernon CT NARC @Tolland AgCtr $5@8 TG Free Wayne N1GUS 860 487 1921 F+

25 May Sorel-Tracy PQ @CurlingClb $5@9 $15/T@6 Luc VE2DWE 450 743 8676 R+

30-31 May Rochester NY RARA Harold K2HC 585 424 7184 W

31 May Quispamsis NB LCARC @MS $4@9:30 $2?T@8:30 Phil VE1PGC R+

1 June Bethpage NY LIMARC @Briarcliff $6@9 $10/Sp Richie K2KNB 516 694 4937 F+

7 June Hermon ME PSARC @HS @8 Roger KA1TKS 207 848 3846 W

7 June Goshen CT SBARC @FG Rt 63 $3@8 $10/T@6 $5TG Lee K1LEE 860 435 0051 W+

8 June Queens NY HOSARC $5@9 $10/Sp Stephen WB2KDG 718 898 5599 W+

14 June Windsor CT VR+C Mus 115 Pierson LN @6AM Tailgate John 860 673 0518

15 June Cambridge MA FLEA at MIT Nick 617 253 3776

21 June Newington CT NARL @HS Mary K1MMH 860-563-2840 W+

12 July Union ME PBARC @Thompson Comm Ctr Scott KB1DSW 207 354 6809 A

20 July Cambridge MA FLEA at MIT Nick 617 253 3776

9 Aug Gales Ferry CT RASON @VFD $4@9 $15/T Wayne KB1NKK 206 350 3064

9 Aug St Albans ME PARC @SnowMobileClb $5@8 George WA1JMM 207 441 6112 W+

15-16 Aug Swanton VT STARC AirportRD $5/D+$5/DTG Arn N1ARN 802 285 6457 +
*******************************************************************************
LAST UPDATE 5-1-08 de W1GSL http://swapfest.us P 1
List is normally updated twice a month - look for the latest version
*******************************************************************************
Additions/ Corrections via e-Mail w1gsl@mit.edu

Bridgewater EOC Activated During BAA Marathon

Bridgewater EOC staffed by N1FY and N1XTBMembers of the Massasoit Amateur Radio Association and the Whitman Amateur Radio club stood by at the Town of Bridgewater Emergency Operations center (EOC) during the Boston Marathon. Most of the major net frequencies for the Marathon were monitored.

The EOC location was staffed as the Eastern Massachusetts ARES command center as a contingency for any significant event that would require amateur radio mobilization outside of the Boston area. The Boston marathon ties up a large percentage of the available amateur radio resources in Massachusetts so provision is made to have some operators on standby outside of the event.

Pictured here: (left) Carl Aveni, N1FY and Phil McNamara, N1XTB

Basic Emergency Comms Workshop for Saturday May 17th 9 AM-4 PM in Concord, Mass.

Emergency Communications Workshop in Concord Massachusetts…

Amateur Radio Emergency Communications Workshop Saturday May 17th, 2008:

There will be an Emergency Communications Workshop on Saturday May 17th, 2008 from 9:00 AM-4:00 PM at the Emerson Hospital in Concord, Massachusetts.

This session is being put on by the ARES Section Staff through the efforts of Middlesex County ARES DEC, Steve Telsey, N1BDA, and the cooperation of the Concord Hospital staff. This Emergency Communications Workshop will provide the background and information to serve Amateur Radio Operators when they need to respond to a communications emergency. It will feature an Introduction and Conclusion to Emergency Communications, and five 1-hour training sessions on topics including:

Overview of Eastern Massachusetts ARES-RACES-SKYWARN Programs
Net Operations
NTS Traffic Message Handling
Basic Overview of ICS
Go Kits

This training will also feature a 1-hour lunch that will be provided at no coerced cost to any Amateur who attends the session.

The presentations will be given by other Amateur Operators well versed in the topics listed above. The training will be a worthwhile endeavor not just for emergency communicators but for anyone who is an Amateur Radio Operator, and wants to learn more about the hobby.

Preregistration is requested but is not required in case anyone would like to attend at the last minute. Please try to preregister by Monday May 12th, 2008 to assure the meeting place is setup properly and we have enough refreshments for breaks between lectures and for the lunch break. We will, however, accept any last minute preregistrations after that day or any walk-ins as long as space permits.

Directions to the Emerson Hospital:

http://maps.yahoo.com/#mvt=m&lat=42.459915&lon=-71.347799&zoom=13&q1=Concord%2CMA

http://www.mapquest.com/maps/Emerson+Hospital:Concord+MA/#a/search/l:::Concord:MA::US:42.4603:-71.349403:city:Middlesex+County/m::7:42.43637:-71.255405:0:0:/so:Emerson+Hospital:::d::25:::::/e

From the North:
Rt 495 South to Rt 2 East or Rt 128 S to Rt 2 West
Emerson Hospital is on the south side of Rt 2 about 1 mile east of the Concord Rotary

From Boston:
Rt 2 East over Rt 128
Emerson Hospital is on the south side of Rt 2 about 7 miles from Rt 128

From the South:
Rt 495 North to Rt 2 East or Rt 128 North to Rt 2 West
Emerson Hospital is on the south side of Rt 2 about 1 mile east of the Concord Rotary

Parking, both outdoor and indoor, is available at the hospital for a fee. There is free parking in lots on the north side of Rt 2, but crossing the highway can be difficult.

There will be talk-in on the Concord 145.11 (pl 110.9) repeater.

For any additional information and to preregister for the workshop, please contact:

N1BDA-Steve Telsey steve.n1bda@verizon.net
KD1CY-Rob Macedo rmacedo@rcn.com

This training should be a worthwhile endeavor for anyone interested in learning more about emergency communications and amateur radio in general.

Respectfully Submitted,

Robert Macedo (KD1CY)
ARES SKYWARN Coordinator
Eastern Massachusetts ARES Section Emergency Coordinator
Pager #: (508) 354-3142
Home Phone #: (508) 994-1875 (After 6 PM)
Home/Data #: (508) 997-4503 (After 6 PM)
Work Phone #: 1-800-445-2588 Ext.: 72929 (8 AM-5 PM)
Email Address: rmacedo@rcn.com
http://ares.ema.arrl.org
http://www.wx1box.org
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MEMA Hosts Unified Command Center (UCC) for Both Marathons

Hello to all….

The following announcement came from Massachusetts State RACES Radio officer, Tom Kinhan-N1CPE from MEMA Public Information Officer, Peter Judge:

THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND SECURITY
_____________________________

MASSACHUSETTS EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY
400 Worcester Road Framingham, MA 01702-5399
Tel: 508-820-2000 Fax: 508-820-2030
Website: www.mass.gov/mema

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Peter Judge, MEMA PIO
April 18, 2008 (508) 820-2002

MEMA HOSTS UCC FOR BOTH MARATHONS
SEOC To Be Activated For Olympic Trials & Boston Marathon

FRAMINGHAM, MA – The Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) Headquarters in Framingham will be the site of the Unified Command Center (UCC) for Sunday’s U.S. Women’s Olympic Marathon Trials and Monday’s 112th running of the Boston Marathon. The UCC, located at the State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC), will be activated and fully operational on Sunday, April 20th at 7:00AM for the Olympic Trials and again on Monday at 7:00AM, remaining operational until at least 7:00PM on Monday, April 21st. This is the seventh straight year that these extensive steps have been taken to ensure the safety and security of participants and spectators along the 26.2-mile course.

The purpose of the UCC is to bring together key organizations for decision-making, communication and support. Medical issues are a key focus again this year, as demonstrated by the detailed planning of this year’s Boston Marathon Medical Subcommittee with extensive outreach to the Commonwealth’s medical community, area hospitals and private ambulance services. The Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency, the Boston Athletic Association Medical Team and the Massachusetts Department of Public Health helped raise medical preparedness and its coordination to an unprecedented level by again co-sponsoring the annual Boston Marathon Medical Seminar, which was held at Newton-Wellesley Hospital. Over 200 volunteer medical personnel attended this year’s event.

Over 80 individuals from the local communities involved with the Boston Marathon, as well as State and Federal Public Safety agencies, organizations and departments are expected to be represented at the SEOC on Patriots’ Day. The UCC monitors the ‘Big Picture’ and rapidly and efficiently responds to situations as they arise. The UCC, through MEMA’s WebEOC technology has the capability of displaying real time messages, weather data, maps, and logs, exchanging information to users both inside and outside the UCC. The UCC had dedicated hard-line telephones and access to 800 MHz, Public Safety radios, backup amateur radios (RACES) and numerous types of wireless communication to support the event and ensure immediate two-way communication. The Incident Command System (ICS) will again be utilized to organize and coordinate activities in the UCC and the field.

The Department of Public Health will again coordinate the use of an innovative ‘runner/patient tracking system’, utilizing barcodes on the runner’s bibs and scores of hand-held devises along the course to track everything from the location of any runner or spectator receiving medical assistance or transport to the number and severity of medical issues that are occurring along the course. The Boston Marathon offers a first ‘real-life’ event utilizing this technology that presents numerous potential benefits during a Mass Casualty Emergency.

Key liaisons in the UCC will represent Police, Fire, Emergency Medical Service and Emergency Management departments from the municipalities which host the event – Hopkinton, Ashland, Framingham, Natick, Wellesley, Newton, Brookline, and Boston. The various other agencies and organizations in the UCC, under the leadership of MEMA Director Don Boyce, include the Executive Office of Public Safety, Boston Athletic Association, MA State Police, MA National Guard, MA Department of Public Health, MA Department of Fire Services, MA Bay Transit Authority, MA Turnpike Authority, MA Highway Department, Federal Aviation Administration, Civil Air Patrol, Federal Bureau of Investigation, American Red Cross, RACES/ARES (amateur radio volunteers), local hospitals and private ambulance services.

WHAT: 2008 U.S. Women’s Olympic Marathon Trials UCC
WHEN: Sunday, April 20, 2008, 7:00AM to at least Mid-day

WHAT: 2008 Boston Marathon UCC
WHEN: Monday, April 21, 2008, 7:00AM to at least 7:00PM
WHERE: The SEOC located at MEMA Headquarters, 400 Worcester Road (Rte. 9) Framingham, MA

WHY: To ensure the safety & security of Marathon participants & spectators

The Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) is the state agency responsible for coordinating federal, state, local, voluntary and private resources during emergencies and disasters in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. MEMA provides leadership to: develop plans for effective response to all hazards, disasters or threats; train emergency personnel to protect the public; provide information to the citizenry; and assist individuals, families, businesses and communities to mitigate against, prepare for, and respond to and recover from emergencies, both natural and man made. For additional information about MEMA and All Hazard Preparedness, go to www.mass.gov/mema.

-30-
1 1 1

Hams Receive Valuable TV PR For Marathon Efforts

WBZ TV video clip showing W3EVE, describing ham radio's involvement in 2008 BAA MarathonWBZ-TV Channel 4 featured a 2:05 length broadcast story describing ham radio’s involvement in the 2008 BAA Marathon. The video featured Steve Schwarm, W3EVE, one of the ham event organizers. Scharm was shown operating station WC1MA, at the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency’s Headquarters in Framingham. MEMA Spokesperson Peter Judge was also featured. He described the importance of having ham operators involved in the Marathon, saying that “they provided valuable intel” along the route.

Fox Hunt, Central MA, May 10-11, 2008

FoxBarry Fox, W1HFN writes on PART List and others:

Attention all foxhunters!

In honor of the CQ Magazine World-Wide Foxhunting Weekend (May 10th & 11th) and to hopefully foster a resurgence of the activity in the Central MA area, I have assembled a “foxbox”.

It will be deployed within a 5-mile radius of a circle centered at N42° 28.102′ W71° 40.430′ For those of you without GPS or mapping software, that is the intersection of Rtes 70 & 117 in Lancaster, MA.

The fox consists of a 50mw transmitter on the national fox hunt frequency of 146.565, there will be a 20 second voice ID every 3 minutes. This rig feeds a 6dB gain antenna.

Testing with this antenna tied to my basement ceiling resulted in hearing it on my mobile rig over one mile away, so “in the clear” and at a decent height, it should be heard for quite some distance.

There will be the usual log in a plastic baggie, also finders can report their finds via my email; w1hfn@arrl.net, with a note detailing the message printed on the foxbox.

If there is sufficient interest in this fun aspect of ham radio, I will deploy the fox each weekend in a different location.

Please forward this notice to any persons or groups you think may be interested.

Good luck and happy hunting!

73,
Barry – W1HFN