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Phil Kane wrote on Tue, 19 Jun 2007 19:13:38 EDT:
On Mon, 18 Jun 2007 23:27:32 EDT, AF6AY wrote: If "Field Day" were an ACTUAL Readiness Exercise I would consider joining in once I had some portable equipment. And what training and qualification of proficiency do you have to slip into the seat at a disaster EOC/ICP or field position and be an effective communicator, such as familiarity with the operation and the communication needs of the site and served agency or even the message protocols and formats in use and where and how they are to be passed? I did not target ANY specific "EOC/ICP" organization. My diatribe was directed towards the ARRL and the old-timers who've mouthed all those legendary rationales about FIELD DAY being a "readiness exercise." I used the word CONSIDER in my sentence you quoted. I've never claimed to know every procedure and protocol used by each and every "EOC/ICP" in existance. I've considered lots of things in my life. Well, I'll have to rescind my consideration. I am so unworthy. Besides, I don't reside in Oregon, not even close to it. If I were to CONSIDER any REAL emergency preparedness group it would be the Los Angeles Auxilliary Communications service. One of their base stations is loaned to the ARRL VEC as a site for US amateur radio license examinations. So far, nobody at "Old Firehouse Number 77" has snarled at me for any reason. I don't consider myself knowledgeable or trained enough to "slip into the seat of an "EOC/ICP" position and "push traffic through." I HAVE been good enough - without training - to assist in communications of utility companies during a real emergency on 17 January 1994. But, I don't claim that is good enough to "slip into any [emergency comms] seat" and do what is Right and Proper. I have been trained in the military to do very portable communications under simulated explosions and automatic gunfire common to combat conditions. But that doesn't count towards being able to push traffic according to protocol and procedure of any particular civilian volunteer group. In an emergency or disaster situation, we need TRAINED "message passers", far more than untrained drop-in volunteers. We are always ready to train folks before anything happens, but we really don't have the time or resources to train folks when the stuff is flowing. Now what have I been saying elesewhere about training? OF COURSE there needs to be training, drills, observation of effectiveness and revision of plans if that seems necessary. That does go on down here and did before 17 January 1994. it works. I've seen it work. In a real emergency. And our Team does run Field Day as a Readiness Exercise, complete with call-outs and dispersal assignments. Well, good on "your Team." However, the ARRL-sponsored Field Day is a Contest in its basic form. Will "your Team" get a good score in that contest with everyone trained and motivated for emergencies? Isn't a good score the epitome of any Field Day outing? Does "your Team" do its drilling and training and whatever on NON-Field Day weekends? I hope they do. Readiness isn't a holiday-sort of thing and exercises shouldn't planned months in advance, advertised in national magazines. Real emergencies can strike without any advance warning. QST won't know about it until well after the fact. Do real emergencies allow perfect protocol and procedure to work? I'm not sure about that. Can everyone keep their cool when a sudden aftershock trembles everything around them? Some real emergencies can actually destroy some comm nodes or the personnel to man them. Hey, I apologize for ruffling feathers of other organizations by directing my comments to the ARRL. So much so that I don't think it is worthwhile to comment much on anything any more in this newsgroup. Too many get all upset at contrary-to-established-ideas. :-( AF6AY |
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