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- Bid: $RACESBUL.319
- Subject: RB319 Calling In Outsiders
-
-
- TO: ALL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCIES VIA AMATEUR RADIO
- INFO: ALL COMMUNICATIONS VOLUNTEERS IN GOVERNMENT SERVICE
- INFO: ALL AMATEURS U.S (@USA: INFORMATION), CAP, MARS
- FROM: CA GOVERNORS OFFICE OF EMERGENCY SERVICES
- (W6SIG@WA6NWE.CA) Ph: 916-262-1600
- 2800 Meadowview Rd., Sacramento, CA 95832
- Landline BBS Open to All: 916-262-1657
- RACESBUL.319 RELEASE DATE: March 28, 1994
- SUBJECT: MGT - Calling in outsiders
-
- During an incident there are times that it is necessary for a
- jurisdiction to request additional help from "outside". In
- California this involves mutual aid whereby local authorities
- turn to an "outside resource" (outside of their jurisdiction) to
- augment their own forces (or where none exists) to accomplish
- their mission. Either way (i.e., augment or provide) the
- so-called "outside" mutual aid people are ALWAYS under control of
- the REQUESTING government. The structure by which that functions
- is part of the Incident Command System.
-
- In communications involving responding FCC Amateur licensees this
- aspect has at times been misunderstood by those not familiar with
- how mutual aid works in fire and law. Those "outside" resources
- NEVER come in to "take over". Mutual aid does NOT belittle the
- locals, but augments them with professionals trained in mutual
- aid response from other jurisdictions.
-
- It is inconceivable that any jurisdiction would ever call in
- distant professionals to spite the locals, as we once heard it
- expressed by an exasperated amateur. It just ISN'T done for a
- number of very good reasons.
-
- Just because there are local FCC licensed Amateurs doesn't
- necessarily mean a government will call upon them in an emergency
- if they haven't been active, trained in and familiar with a RACES
- or similar communications reserve program.
-
- It is professionalism, whether paid or unpaid. No professional
- ever responds in mutual aid to do anything other than to support
- the local needs. That is the true mark of a professional (paid or
- unpaid), whether law, fire or communications.
-
- Any communications responder who is such an amateur that he/she
- can't discern the difference between amateurish activity and
- professional activity shouldn't be responding no matter how well
- intended. Instead, that person needs to take training and
- familiarization programs to help understand the mutual aid
- process.
-
- An ACS/RACES response from a city, county, or State OES in
- support of another government is due to a request from that
- government. To respond without a verified official request is the
- height of amateurish activity, and can have severe consequencies
- except in the most unusual of instances.
- EOM.
-
-
-