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Jeffrey Herman wrote:
robert casey wrote: Yes, and hams can handle that low priority stuff to offload the more important communications links. "I took care of the mundane boring stuff so the heroes could save the lives"... Our last hurricane (1992) was a direct hit upon the island of Kauai. All normal comms between Kauai County and the rest of the state were wiped out. The ONLY comms between the governor here in Honolulu and the mayor of Kauai was via amateur radio. Not only H&W traffic was passed, but more importantly, safety of life traffic, too. Amateur radio is part of each county's emergency plan to the point where ham stations are set up in each police and fire station. Licensing exams are given regularly to police and firemen. Also, every hospital has a station. The state thinks so highly of amateur radio that our statewide repeater system rides on the state-owned microwave backbone which connects each county (island). So, when normal communications go down, all the counties (islands) of state are neatly tied together via ham radio. And yet that seems so hard for some peope to grasp. - Mike KB3EIA - |
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