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- MGTAOVU2 Version 1. 3 3/1/92
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- Subject: RACES MANAGEMENT AN OVERVIEW , PART 2
-
- IS RACES JUST FOR ONE DEPARTMENT?
- It may seem that way in some governments because a high
- visibility department may run the RACES program. This does not
- mean, however, that RACES serves only one department. The RACES
- must serve emergency communications requirements anywhere in that
- government plus outside liaison requirements. Surplus operators
- and resources may be assigned to support other organizations
- essential to that government's mission. RB 85-15
-
- DO FEDERAL AGENCIES HAVE RACES?
- Answer: No. The RACES is administered by local and state civil
- defense organizations. This does not mean that the RACES cannot
- support Federal agencies, however. We encourage county RACES to
- contact, support and maintain liaison with those agencies you
- might assist. This may include the National Weather Service, U.S.
- Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service,
- Corps of Engineers, and others in your county. Counties should
- encourage such support as training necessary to maintain
- proficiency and interest among RACES members. State OES will
- assist wherever we can. Call 916-427-4281. RB 85-16
-
- DOES RACES PROVIDE EQUIPMENT FOR RADIO AMATEURS?
- No, the RACES is not like the MARS in that respect. The RACES is
- comprised largely of Amateurs providing their own equipment in a
- structured and efficient organization. In those governments where
- the RACES support has proven itself, equipment may be provided if
- funds allow. This usually takes the form of Amateur radio
- equipment in the EOC and/or mountaintop repeaters. ATV,
- digipeaters and packet terminal node controllers have joined the
- list lately. Once you have proven your value you are more likely
- to get permanent funding support. One Radio Officer said
- recently, "You are as good as you want to be." RB85-17
-
- GOVERNMENT-OWNED HAM EQUIPMENT
- Question: Can a state or local government own and provide a
- repeater for hams? If so, how is it licensed?
- Answer: Countless state, county, and city governments provide
- voice repeaters, packet nodes, base stations, portables and other
- Amateur Radio equipment for their Radio Amateur Civil Emergency
- Service people. Nothing says a ham has to own the equipment he or
- she operates. Thank goodness! Those governments have literally
- put their money where their mouth is. They value the high level
- of professional communications services provided by their hams
- and prove it by providing quality equipment. It is fully
- operational alongside their police, fire, local government, and
- other radios. Governments are often willing to pay more for
- commercial grade public safety type radios so that they may be
- maintained by their own technicians in their government radio
- vaults and elsewhere. It does not require a ham to maintain a ham
- radio. A government-owned radio is licensed to any agreeable ham.
- At one time local governments could license their RACES radios
- under a block of special callsigns reserved for RACES stations.
- They are no longer available but several callsigns are still
- active by virtue of timely license renewal actions. RB 200
-
- VOLUNTEERS MUST BE REGISTERED
- One of the main reasons radio Amateurs who serve any OES must be
- enrolled in RACES is that no services of any volunteer can be
- accepted by any government unless they are recorded as a
- volunteer Disaster Service Worker. Without such registration, as
- accomplished in the RACES, there is no Worker's Compensation and
- other protective benefits provided by law. By the same token,
- governments should not categorize all Amateur Radio operators as
- RACES. In short, every ham must be preregistered as a volunteer
- Disaster Service Worker before the emergency or exercise. This is
- done by Radio Officers in OES organizations. Please direct
- questions to this office. RB 85-2
-
- RACES? WHO NEEDS IT? WHAT IS IT?
- By Bill Musladin, N6BTJ, Asst State RACES Officer, State of
- California
- Many years ago the predecessor to FEMA (the Federal Emergency
- Management Agency was instrumental in the creation of the RACES,
- the Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service. Today FEMA's
- connection with the RACES is much reduced, limited to the award
- of monetary grants to government agencies which have RACES units
- for purchase of communications equipment. Note that these grants
- go to the sponsoring governmental agency, and not to the RACES
- unit itself. This is because RACES units must be sponsored and
- controlled by the governmental agency responsible for disaster
- control and recovery. These agencies are at the state, county,
- and/or city level. FEMA itself does not sponsor or control the
- RACES program at any level, nor is there a federal RACES.
- The RACES is authorized by the Federal Communications Commission
- in Part 97 of its Regulations, under the Amateur Radio Service.
- Other Radio Services authorized and controlled by FCC regulations
- include Local Government, Police, Fire and many others. They are
- all, in effect, enabling rules to provide radio communications
- for eligible users. Within the limits of these enabling
- provisions the FCC does not control how the communications
- service is staffed, administered, or provided. Sometimes Amateur
- Radio operators think that Part 97 is the begin-all and end-all
- of RACES. However, that is not the case. The FCC does not tell
- its licensees (whether Fire, Police, Amateur, or others) how to
- administer and run those operations.
- RACES units function to augment, at time of need, disaster
- related communications capabilities of their sponsoring agencies.
- Thus RACES traffic will normally consist of disaster related
- communications between governmental agencies. This is the key
- difference between the RACES, and the ARES, the Amateur Radio
- Emergency Service, developed by the American Radio Relay League.
- ARES may handle disaster related traffic, such as Health and
- Welfare messages, support of the Red Cross, and the Blood Bank
- System. Such agencies and services are usually equally as vital
- in dealing with an emergency, but the communications requirements
- they generate are not between government units, and therefore are
- NOT a function of the RACES. Disasters, by their nature, may blur
- the distinctions between the RACES and ARES in practice, but the
- distinction remains important.
- This clear distinction, of RACES traffic typically between
- government locations, means the home based Amateur gear can have
- little utility, except possibly as relay facilities or as a
- monitor. RACES volunteers, when called up by their governmental
- sponsor, must expect to work away from home, either at a
- permanent or temporary government establishment. Also, RACES
- volunteers may be called upon to operate non-ham government radio
- gear, and on non-Amateur frequencies.
- There is yet another, and more vital, distinguishing difference
- between RACES and ARES volunteer radio Amateurs, possibly the
- most important one to the RACES volunteer. RACES volunteers, when
- called up by their sponsoring government agency, are legally (if
- unpaid) employees of that agency. As such, that agency has a
- legal responsibility for each individual's health and welfare
- from the time he or she leaves home until return.
- In California the government's responsibility to its volunteers
- is met through the "Registered Disaster Service Workers" program.
- By recognizing in advance of callup that RACES volunteers are an
- integral part of their disaster response team, each volunteer is
- covered just as are the paid personnel.
- The sponsoring governmental agency's responsibility to its
- volunteers has been recognized throughout the state. A survey of
- state, county, and city governments sponsoring RACES units
- overwhelmingly favored participation in the "Registered Disaster
- Service Worker" program, for their own protection as well as that
- of their volunteers. While registration as Disaster Service
- Workers is not a requirement in the FCC regulations covering
- RACES, in California the requirement is considered a prudent
- response to an obvious need.
- In many areas the RACES has developed into a respected and
- dependable adjunct to regular staff, to be called upon with
- confidence. Just as there are volunteer firemen and reserve law
- enforcement elements in many governments, RACES volunteers have
- become equally important and respected as their "deputy
- communications" personnel. SB12-91 titled RACES WhoWhat.
-
- RESPONSE INSTITUTE SUMMARY
- ATTENTION: EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT COORDINATORS via Amateur Radio
- Close to two hundred people attended the 1st Emergency Response
- Institute seminar in San Jose on March 28-29. It was attended by
- ARES, RACES and other interested hams plus representatives and
- speakers from Federal, State, and local public safety and
- emergency management agencies. There were many "how to" sessions
- to better equip the participants to work together and support
- public agencies. Some came from as far away as San Luis Obispo,
- Siskiyou and Kern counties.
- Congratulations to Dave Larton, N6JQJ, and his staff for putting
- on a most worthwhile seminar.
- A detailed report is available to agencies requesting one.
- RACES RADIO OFFICERS NOTE: Demonstrate your communications
- capability by providing a copy of this message to your local city
- and/or county emergency management agency. Commencing next week
- will be series of messages specifically for all such agencies via
- Amateur Radio. The messages will address problem areas that exist
- between Amateur Radio and some local governments in California
- that were brought out at the ERI in San Jose. The delivery of
- these bulletins depends entirely on you in most cases. This often
- is the means by which you stay in touch with your local emergency
- management agencies. Sgd/Stan Harter, KH6GBX Amateur Radio
- Service Coordinator. RB87-11
-
- GETTING BULLETINS to the EMERGENCY SERVICE MANAGER
- ATTN: All RACES operators (i.e., any Amateur enrolled in an
- Emergency Services agency).
- An increasing number of emergency services agency managers at the
- city and county levels are learning of the RACES bulletins and
- indicate they are not getting all of them; and some not at all.
- Interestingly enough, some say they have a RACES unit but have
- never received any of the bulletins. This can only mean that
- there is a breakdown in the delivery chain. Perhaps it's a
- misunderstanding among some operators. Check the "TO" line in the
- message headers. The local OES agencies do not receive these
- bulletins by any means other than you -- the Radio Amateurs
- assigned to that OES agency. This affords both the Amateurs and
- the OES agencies to maintain regular contact with each other. If
- this will be your first message to be so delivered, please
- include as many previous messages as possible.
- Any OES agency requiring a complete set of the messages from May
- 1985 forward, please contact your OES Region Communications
- Coordinator. The Bulletin series answers questions, provides
- interpretations, clarifies misunderstandings, and provides
- specific Amateur Radio program guidance requested of State OES by
- the State Senate. RB 87-21
-
- 2-METER SIMPLEX PLAN ANNOUNCED
- Local communications should be conducted on simplex wherever
- possible during a widespread emergency. A disaster may cripple
- repeaters. Commercial power may fail. Emergency power may fail or
- not be available. Emergency power fuel may be used up and
- refueling may be difficult or impossible. Repeater site access
- roads may be impassable. LPG systems may have only a large tank
- with no provision for using more readily available LPG bottles in
- an emergency. Repeater racks may be toppled, cables snapped or
- antennas downed by an earthquake. Where some repeaters fail and
- others survive, there will be even greater contention among
- operators to use the surviving repeater(s). This can be
- compounded by undisciplined operators and unnecessary
- communications. Sheer volume of essential communications alone
- may overload a repeater.
- To assist in the use of simplex with the least interference a
- STATEWIDE 2-METER RACES SIMPLEX FREQUENCY PLAN has been prepared.
- The plan divides California's 58 counties into seven
- groups--Group A through Group G. The counties in any group are
- separated by many miles and intervening terrain. There are 13
- simplex frequencies in each group for every county. Six channels
- are common statewide. The counties in Group A, for example, are
- Del Norte, Tehama, Sonoma, Sacramento, San Mateo, and Inyo.
- The frequencies were carefully selected so as to minimize
- interference with existing operations and systems. The simplex
- plan may be implemented immediately by all counties north of
- Santa Barbara, Ventura, Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties.
- In all counties south of San Luis Obispo, Kern and Inyo counties
- a special rule applies: Each frequency in each applicable group
- must be approved in writing prior to plans or use by the State
- OES Southern Area RACES Coordinator, 2151 East D St. - Suite
- 203A, Ontario, CA 91764; telephone 714-391-4485. The reason for
- this is that repeaters in Southern California developed at a
- greater rate before present day band plans and there can be
- conflicts between existing systems and the simplex plan in
- certain areas.
- We wish to express our appreciation to Dave Tyler, N6DRT, of the
- Pacific Division American Radio Relay League for his major
- contributions in both the concept and preparation of this plan.
- Action: (1) Obtain a copy of the plan from your State OES Region
- office. (2) Amend your county RACES plan to include these new
- frequencies. (3) Include your simplex frequencies in your county
- RACES plans yet to be written. (KH6GBX) RB012
-
- OBTAINING SURPLUS PROPERTY FOR LOCAL GOVERNMENT
- QUESTION: "How can local RACES units obtain State and Federal
- surplus two-way radios?" ANSWER: The State Department of General
- Services suggests that the local government write to: Surplus
- Property General Services Department State of California, 140
- Commerce Circle Sacramento, CA 95815 (916-924-2970)
- The local government's letter should request the person screening
- the request "to be on the lookout for ...." [That is, specify
- here what it is you want; such as "mobile, portable and fixed
- two-way FM radio communications equipment."]
- The person handling the request may not have any specific
- knowledge of two-way radios and may simply send to the requesting
- agency the manufacturer's name, make and model. The requesting
- agency must have the expertise to determine whether or not it is
- desired. The requesting agency pays the State a handling fee that
- ranges from less than 10% to 33% of the acquisition cost. Many
- government agencies get their desks and supplies this way. State
- surplus property screeners also tour Federal surplus warehouses
- for you. That is why it is important to file a letter with the
- State DGS.
- Surplus property is not available to private individuals. Any
- questions should be directed to the DGS address or telephone
- number shown above.
- Some State agencies do not turn in surplus radio equipment to DGS
- but dispose of it themselves. We cannot speak on their behalf but
- some of the big users include Caltrans and the CHP. In State OES
- we occasionally offer surplus communications equipment, when
- available, to people or organizations in the following priority:
- (1) State RACES personnel; (2) County and city RACES units; (3)
- any Amateur and the CAP; or (4) destroy it. If we do, we issue a
- bulletin statewide on packet. RB042
-
- FOOTNOTE TO BULLETINS-BY-TOPIC
- This material is the result of the interest of people from many
- areas around the country. Their ideas, questions and suggestions
- were then put into these bulletin formats by Stanly Harter,
- KH6GBX, State Races Coordinator, Office of Emergency Services,
- 2800 Meadowview Road, Sacramento, California 95832 between l985
- and l992. Input and comments are welcomed by mail or packet radio
- to W6HIR @ WA6NWE.#NOCAL.CA [Telephone 916-427-4281.]
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