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The reporter doesn't have a clue.
The Motorola guy should know better. -------------------------------------------------------------- By *CHRISTOPHER RHOADS* *Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL* September 6, 2005; Page A19 MONROE, La. -- In a shelter here, 300 miles north of New Orleans, Theo=20 McDaniel took his plight to a young man fiddling with a clunky,=20 outdated-looking radio. Mr. McDaniel, a 25-year-old barber, had evacuated New Orleans with his=20 wife and two small children more than a week ago and since then had had=20 no contact with his brother or his aunt. The last he heard, his 42-year- old aunt was clinging to her roof. "We've got to get a message down there to help them," he said. The man=20 at the radio sent the information to the emergency-operations center=20 across town, which relayed it to rescue units in New Orleans. Later in=20 the weekend, Mr. McDaniel learned that food and water were on the way to=20 his trapped brother and his brother's young family. He had heard nothing=20 about his aunt. With Hurricane Katrina having knocked out nearly all the high-end=20 emergency communications gear, 911 centers, cellphone towers and normal=20 fixed phone lines in its path, ham-radio operators have begun to fill=20 the information vacuum. "Right now, 99.9% of normal communications in=20 the affected region is nonexistent," says David Gore, the man operating=20 the ham radio in the Monroe shelter. "That's where we come in." In an age of high-tech, real-time gadgetry, it's the decidedly unsexy=20 ham radio -- whose technology has changed little since World War II --=20 that is in high demand in ravaged New Orleans and environs. The Red=20 Cross issued a request for about 500 amateur radio operators -- known as=20 "hams" -- for the 260 shelters it is erecting in the area. The American=20 Radio Relay League, a national association of ham-radio operators, has=20 been deluged with requests to find people in the region. The U.S. Coast=20 Guard is looking for hams to help with its relief efforts. Ham radios, battery operated, work well when others don't in part=20 because they are simple. Each operator acts as his own base station,=20 requiring only his radio and about 50 feet of fence wire to transmit=20 messages thousands of miles. Ham radios can send messages on multiple=20 channels and in myriad ways, including Morse code, microwave frequencies=20 and even email. Then there are the ham-radio operators themselves, a band of radio=20 enthusiasts who spend hours jabbering with each other even during normal=20 times. They are often the first to get messages in and out of disaster=20 areas, in part because they are everywhere. (The ARRL estimates there=20 are 250,000 licensed hams in the U.S.) Sometimes they are the only=20 source of information in the first hours following a disaster. "No=20 matter how good the homeland-security system is, it will be=20 overwhelmed," says Thomas Leggett, a retired mill worker manning a ham=20 radio in the operations center here. "You don't hear about us, but we=20 are there." Slidell, a town 30 miles northeast of New Orleans, was directly hit by=20 the hurricane and remains virtually cut off from the outside world. One=20 of the few, if not the only, communications links is Michael King, a=20 retired Navy captain, operating a ham radio out of a Slidell hospital. "How are you holding up, Mike?" asked Sharon Riviere into a ham-radio=20 microphone at Monroe's operations center. She and her husband, Ron, who=20 is the president of the Slidell ham-radio club, had evacuated before the=20 storm to the home of some fellow ham-radio enthusiasts in Monroe. She=20 said Mr. King had been working 20-hour days since the storm hit. Crackling static and odd, garbled sounds followed her question to Mr.=20 King. Then he replied: "It's total devastation here. I've got 18 feet of=20 water at my house. Johnny's Caf=E9 down there has water up to its roof." Ms. Riviere asked about her own home, which is not far from Mr. King's.=20 "It's full of mud," Mr. King replied. "Looks like someone's been=20 slugging it out in there." Ham radios are often most effective as one link in a chain of=20 communication devices. Early last week, someone trapped with 15 people=20 on a roof of a New Orleans home tried unsuccessfully to get through to a=20 911 center on his cellphone. He was able to call a relative in Baton=20 Rouge, who in turn called another relative, Sybil Hayes, in Broken=20 Arrow, Okla. Ms. Hayes, whose 81-year-old aunt was among those stranded=20 on the New Orleans roof, then called the Red Cross in Broken Arrow,=20 which handed the message to its affiliated ham-radio operator, Ben=20 Joplin. Via stations in Oregon, Idaho and Louisiana, Mr. Joplin got the message=20 to rescue workers who were able to save the 15 people on the roof,=20 according to the ARRL, based in Newington, Conn. "We are like the Pony=20 Express," says the 26-year-old Mr. Gore, wearing black cowboy boots.=20 "One way or the other, even by hand, we will get you the message." Mr. Gore, who is in charge of the northeastern district of Louisiana for=20 the Amateur Radio Emergency Service, has spent a lot of time the past=20 week at the Monroe shelter, helping evacuees try to track missing=20 friends and relatives. Last Monday, Danita Alexander of Violet, La., came to a ham operator in=20 the Monroe shelter asking about her 96-year-old grandfather, Willie=20 Bright, who had been in a nursing home in New Orleans. The next day, she=20 got word back from a ham operator that he had been safely transferred to=20 a shelter near New Orleans. "We can't do enough of these," says Mark=20 Ketchell, who runs the ARES branch in Monroe. Nevertheless, the ham-radio community feels under threat. Telecom=20 companies want to deliver broadband Internet connections over power=20 lines, which ham-radio operators say distorts communications in the=20 surrounding area. Since hams are "amateurs," there is little lobbying=20 money to fight such changes, they add. *The hams also get little respect from telecommunications-equipment=20 companies, such as Motorola Inc. "Something is better than nothing,=20 that's right," says Jim Screeden, who runs all of Motorola's repair=20 teams in the field for its emergency-response business. "But ham radios=20 are pretty close to nothing." Mr. Screeden says ham radios can take a=20 long time to relay messages and work essentially as "party lines," with=20 multiple parties talking at once. Says Mr. Leggett at the Monroe=20 operations center: "We are the unwanted stepchild. But when the s- hits=20 the fan, who are you going to call?"* *Write to *Christopher Rhoads at =20 |
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