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"Bob Haberkost" wrote in message ... "David Eduardo" wrote in message ... | "Robert J Carpenter" wrote in message | ... | "Ron Hardin" wrote in message | ... | WDLT 660 Mobile is booming in in Central Ohio at 5:45 EDST; | they have no appreciable radiation northwards, according to the | map, and 850w nights as well, and their local sunrise is 5am CST, | which is over an hour away. | They may very well have special permission given that tropical storm | Cindy is in their area. | You do not need permission to use better facilities in time of emergency. No, but the emergency has to have been officially declared to do so, doesn't it? No. Stations that are sudden storm or eartqhake zones, or where industrial accidents have happened to cite examples, can use discretion. Many of these are never declared emergencies (like the Nortridge quake in 1994) Which is not to say that it wasn't, but it seems to me Cindy was hundreds of miles off the coast when Ron posted this, and thus Mobile wasn't yet in a declared emergency. I've been in a half dozen major hurricanes in Puerto Rico, and, while always at stations that had same day and night facilities, know preparations for them begin 48 to 72 hours in advance. A strike threat would be enough to go to the best mode of operation possible. |
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