Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
From: "Bob Brock" on Mon, Jan 29 2007 12:18 am
wrote in message From: "Bob Brock" on Sat, 27 Jan 2007 09:12:18 It's been my life experience that MOST citizens will voluntarily help out others in REAL emergencies, whether or not they know how to operate a radio. Having been IN a couple of REAL emergencies locally, I have yet to experience first-hand any flurry of amateur activity to "aid organizations who cannot communicate directly via radio." During one of those REAL emergencies I've found that the existing organizations were quite adequately prepared...and drilled and trained on emergencies WITH their equipment and worked-out emergency plans that weren't public-relations news releases. Back in 1999, I spent a week or so coordinating commumications between E-Com (AKA 911) the National Guard, and the American Red Cross taking people to shelters during an ice storm and major power outage. Nothing has upgraded around here since then to allow the different agencies to communicate if cell phones went out, so I'd be ready to do it again. Not all of us live in the big cities and based on what I've seen critiqued, they aren't much better than those of us out in the sticks when it comes to interagency communications. Yes, I can understand that "the sticks" (as you say) don't have all the communications facilities. However, we can't neglect the fact that so much of the USA population lives in urban areas. In my life experience, as I wrote, I've also been in emergencies. Further, since I live in a "sunbelt" area, we don't have ice storms and, usually, electric power here is a reliable thing. But, I spent the first 19 years of my life IN a northern Illinois city that DID experience ice storms, regular winter snowfall, etc., and the electric power was not always reliable. No, I wasn't involved in radio comms then. My urban area has a LARGE population. On January 17, 1994, we all experienced a sizeable earthquake here. It killed 58 people. It left thousands temporarily homeless, hundreds requiring medical aid for injuries. The ENTIRE population (roughly 8 million) was without ANY electric power for half a day, a few areas (physically damaged) without for 3 days. My point was not a "can you top this" thing but to point out that the public safety and utility infrastructure had ALREADY prepared for this sort of thing and acted as they had planned and trained for when disaster struck. At that time the centralized emergency communications network was new, involving dozens of neighboring government public safety organizations. It received a "trial by fire" test and passed it. Now I don't claim (or "boast") that it is best, only that it WORKS. Intelligent advanced planning and continuing training WORKS. Let's see. Others have complained that "the sticks" don't have lots of money to do such things. No doubt true. But the Greater Los Angeles area doesn't have "lots of money" either. TAXES pay for nearly all. If there are 8 million taxpayers, then the amount becomes large. In the case of the LA emergency communications network, the local public safety organizations ALREADY HAD the major part of the communications equipment. So did the utility companies. The thing needed was some way to tie them all together, ORGANIZE, PLAN AHEAD, and KEEP TRAINING in the different possible scenarios. Out here there's lots of nature lovers who grouse and grumble about our "concrete rivers." Flood control channels, numerous in the 1.5 million population San Fernando Valley. What most of them don't realize is that the normally quiet, peaceful rivers and streams have become raging torrents during heavy rainfall and flash flooding. There's a few old, old motion pictures still around that recorded one of the old floods. It used to KILL people and render a lot of "the Valley" impossible to settle for cities. Some good thinking, PLANNING AHEAD, help from the WPA following the Great Depression enabled the flood control channels to be built and make the place safe from flood destruction. Yeah, "the sticks" couldn't afford that, either...the federal government had to help out. [need I mention the TVA?] But, we wound up with no terrible destructive flash flooding as had been nature's norm in past centuries. Mama Nature goes on a big bender every once in a while, everywhere. We can't stop that, only divert some of it. The key is not necessarily money, just to ORGANIZE, PLAN AHEAD, and KEEP TRAINING for any area, large, small, or in-between, using resources at hand. More resources is a different problem...politics of money disbursement is something to handle at the local level. ORGANIZE, PLAN AHEAD, TRAIN and keep on TRAINING. It works. For professionals and amateurs alike. Press releases won't do it. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
So who won the "when does NoCode happen" pool? | Policy | |||
another place the fruit can't post | Policy | |||
LAPD getting rid of "Code 2-High" calls on 5/16 | Scanner | |||
Why You Don't Like The ARRL | General | |||
NCVEC NPRM for elimination of horse and buggy morse code requirement. | Policy |