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Old September 14th 05, 09:46 PM
Michael Coslo
 
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wrote:

Michael Coslo wrote:

wrote:

Michael Coslo wrote:



Don't agree. First responders are not "radio operators", they're
firefighters, medics, police at multiple levels and all the rest. Given
a big enough disaster like the New Orleans hurricane onsite FEMA
operatives, the Coast Guard, any number of military units from all the
services also land in the middle of it.



I must not have made myself clear Brian. The answer is not in freeing
up the BW now occupied by analog television. The answer for
communications in a disaster is trained and competent operators.



I agree with all that.


And the trained operators should be called in when the regular comms
first go out, not after a few days.



I don't agree here - depending on what I think you mean by "trained
operators". Local governments can't train and store reserve
dispatchers who are only activated for drills in preparation for major
emergencies, won't work. Emergency dispatching is an art and skill
which has to be used on a very regular basis or the dispatchers lose
the edge they need to do the job properly when a "big one" hits
unexpectedly.


I think for all practical concerns, the trained operators are us. From
what I have seen in the short time that I have been a Ham, there is a
learning curve to become a proficient operator. And although A person
can become proficient of course, it takes some time. We get training all
the time in our contests, and the occasional more formal emergency
training events.


In those cases the local authorities can call up all shifts of their
regular crews to get a sufficient amount of manpower and their reserve
radios on the air. But in order to get any benefit out of an approach
like this the dispatch centers have to be able to almost immediately be
expanded and able to keep operating thru hell and high water for an
extended period. None of those type facilities are in place that I've
ever heard about.




What I think should happen is the development and deployment of some
sort of "super" emergency operations centers staffed by highly trained
dispatchers who know how to seamlessly patch the first responder
specialists making the initial call into the specific specialists they
need to contact.


I doubt that there will be the money for that. Good idea tho'.



A couple $80 million civil AWACs planes and $10 million a year to
maintain and staff 'em is chicken feed. Problem is that Haliburton will
have already drained the till before Boeing and Motorola get their
passes at it.


Hey! you stole my line!...really! ;^)

- Mike KB3EIA -