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- Subject: Policies and Guidelines
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- P O L I C I E S A N D G U I D E L I N E S
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- F O R T H E
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- RADIO AMATEUR CIVIL EMERGENCY SERVICE
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- S T A T E O F C A L I F O R N I A
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- Issued August 1985
- REVISED April 15, 1992
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- POLICIES AND GUIDELINES FOR THE
- RADIO AMATEUR CIVIL EMERGENCY SERVICE
-
- I N D E X
- TITLE PAGE
-
- Index................................................... 2
-
- 1.0 DEFINITIONS ............................................ 3
-
- 1.1 Function
- 1.2 RACES
- 1.3 RACES Radio Officer
- 1.4 Communications Officer
- 1.5 State RACES Coordinator
- 1.6 Levels of RACES
- 1.7 ARES
-
- 2.0 UTILIZATION ............................................ 4
-
- Frequent usage, training activities, administrative
- and operational procedures, non-emergency missions
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- 3.0 ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT ............................ 5
-
- 3.1 In what department to locate the RACES function
- 3.2 Operational Area concept
- 3.3 Regions may enroll where no county RACES exists
- 3.4 Competent volunteer staff required
- 3.5 Appointing a RACES Radio Officer
- 3.6 One RACES unit per government
- 3.7 State of California Government RACES organization
- 3.8 RACES staff organization
- 3.9 Radio Officers are unpaid volunteer employees
- 3.10 Radio Officers responsible for RACES plans
- 3.11 Radio Officer's place in table of organization
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- 4.0 RACES PLANS ............................................ 7
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- 4.1 Guidelines and format
- 4.2 Wartime and peacetime applications
- 4.3 Use of annexes for perishable data
- 4.4 Frequency coordination responsibilities
- 4.5 County RACES Plan
- 4.6 Concurrence/approval signatures
-
- 5.0 ENROLLMENT REQUIREMENTS ................................ 9
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- 5.1 Applications
- 5.2 Communications class of Disaster Service Workers
- 5.3 Local record checks
- 5.4 Identification cards
- 5.5 Sign in/Sign out records
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- POLICIES AND GUIDELINES FOR THE
- RADIO AMATEUR CIVIL EMERGENCY SERVICE
-
-
- 1.0 DEFINITIONS
-
-
- 1.1 FUNCTION. The primary function of RACES is to establish and
- maintain communications to support government operations during
- times of emergency with Amateur radio by persons properly
- enrolled, and in California registered as Disaster Service
- Workers. An emergency may be single or concurrent incidents,
- or a major natural or manmade disaster. An incident can
- involve two or more agencies of the same government or more than
- one government.
-
- 1.2 RACES (Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service) personnel
- are volunteer government employees and enjoy certain benefits and
- protection when activated for an emergency, training, or work
- party under proper authority. RACES is not a club, detached
- group, or self-governing activity.
-
- 1.3 RACES RADIO OFFICER. That person, a licensed Radio Amateur,
- appointed by the government as chief of its RACES program. The
- RACES Radio Officer (or called simply the Radio Officer) is
- considered key staff and part of the initial response team to the
- EOC (Emergency Operations Center). The Radio Officer usually
- reports to the Communications Officer or to the OES Coordinator
- in his absence.
-
- 1.4 COMMUNICATIONS OFFICER. That person responsible for the
- overall telecommunications planning, operations and maintenance
- for the EOC and the governmental jurisdiction. The
- Communications Officer is key staff and is a part of the initial
- response team to the EOC. The Communications Officer usually
- reports direct to the OES Coordinator. At State OES Region
- offices/EOC's, the Region Communications Coordinator serves this
- role.
-
- 1.5 STATE RACES COORDINATOR. That person, a licensed Radio
- Amateur, assigned by the Governor's Office of Emergency Services
- (the State OES) to manage and coordinate the RACES program in
- California. The position is assisted by the State Radio Officer
- and other volunteer staff.
-
- 1.6 LEVELS OF RACES. The levels of RACES are the same as the
- levels of government in California (i.e., State, county, and
- city). State RACES personnel and equipment support the State OES
- headquarters, its six regions, mobile strike teams and relay
- stations. There are county RACES organizations and city RACES
- programs.
-
- 1.7 ARES (Amateur Radio Emergency Service) is administered by
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- the ARRL (American Amateur Relay League), the national
- association that represents Amateur Radio operators. ARRL and
- ARES identify those Amateurs who are genuinely interested in
- emergency and public service communications. ARES largely
- supports the non-State and local government needs for Amateur
- Radio -- such as the American Red Cross, other relief
- organizations, and the important task of post-disaster health and
- welfare messages. Many RACES personnel are also ARES members.
- Whereas this may appear to be a conflict, OES/government need for
- Amateur communications (e.g., RACES) may typically be about 10%
- of the total Amateur radio involvement in a disaster and the
- other 90% are performing ARES-related communications. State OES
- joins ARRL in urging all Amateurs to be in both ARES and RACES.
- ARES is managed on the local level by ARRL-appointed emergency
- coordinators or EC's. The area served by an EC may include
- several counties and cities.
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- 2.0 UTILIZATION
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- 2.1 RACES personnel proficiency and equipment readiness is
- maintained through frequent employment in incident
- communications, exercises, drills, training and related
- activities, including the installation, maintenance and operation
- of RACES equipment. Skilled and properly licensed technicians may
- also be an emergency maintenance resource during a communications
- emergency.
-
- 2.2 A jurisdiction's OES need not necessarily be involved in an
- incident for its RACES resources to be activated and utilized. A
- brush fire or other incident, for example, may not directly
- involve a local government OES but may use its RACES resources.
- Whereas an OES does not sponsor a marathon, it may sanction the
- use of its RACES as an approved training exercise.
-
- 2.3 Administrative procedures should be developed by the local
- government OES so that other agencies within the same government
- may promptly obtain RACES support when needed. The development of
- standard operating procedures is a function of the Radio Officer
- position. Certain radio operating procedures are already
- established for commonality and standardization.
-
- 2.4 A state of emergency does not have to exist or be declared
- to activate RACES. Every effort should be made, in fact, to use
- RACES resources as frequently as possible so as to maintain both
- personnel and equipment in a continuing state of readiness and
- proficiency.
-
- 2.5 Opportunities to utilize RACES resources include, but not
- limited to, the following:
-
- ? Meetings, training, weekly nets, administrative, and other
- work at the EOC, office, or elsewhere; including installation
- and work parties.
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- ? Holiday/special event traffic reports. Communications for
- government during races, marathons, fairs, and other public
- events.
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- ? Hospital nets.
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- ? Radio link between the EOC or Incident Command and the primary
- Emergency Broadcast System station(s).
-
- ? Hazardous material spill or incident.
-
- ? Rainfall/stream level observation and reports during a storm.
- Severe weather observations and reports. (Prior training from
- the NWS is required.)
-
- ? ATV (Amateur Television) from the National Weather Service
- forecast office to the EOC for periodic briefings during severe
- weather incidents.
-
- ? Hostage situation. (ATV transmits high resolution color
- pictures back to the EOC or law enforcement HQ for training
- purposes.)
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- ? Forest and wild fires.
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- ? Floods.
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- ? Point-to-point links during telephone outages.
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- ? Interstate mutual aid missions: forest fires, etc.
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- ? Landslides with long detours in remote areas: provide phone
- patches for the inconvenienced motorists.
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- 3.0 ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT
-
- 3.1 RACES is typically managed by the local government's office
- of emergency services/civil defense. In some counties RACES is
- administered by the sheriff and in some cities by the fire or
- police chief.
-
- 3.2 It is recommended that a county OES administer one RACES
- program to serve all of the county and its cities whenever
- practical to more effectively manage and utilize a limited
- resource--Amateur radio operators. RACES personnel may thus be
- preassigned to particular cities or geographic areas. Separate
- city OES RACES organizations should be generally employed only
- when a city is a large jurisdiction (500,000 or larger) or where
- a county cannot administer a countywide RACES program.
-
- 3.3 In those counties where no OES/Civil Defense council
- (disaster council, Stats. 1946 lst Ex. Sess., Ch. 104, as amended
- by Stats. 1971, Ch. 38) exists, Amateur radio operators may be
- enrolled by the State OES Region RACES in which they reside.
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- 3.4 The administration of any RACES organization and program
- requires competent, qualified, and dedicated volunteer staff
- similar to other government volunteer programs; i.e., reserve
- deputy sheriffs, volunteer firefighters, reserve police officers,
- search and rescue, and similar programs requiring trained and
- disciplined volunteers.
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- 3.5 Any jurisdiction employing RACES resources will appoint a
- RACES Radio Officer, referred hereinafter as the Radio Officer. A
- county (or city) Radio Officer reports to a superior in that same
- local government, most often its Communications Officer or OES
- Coordinator.
-
- 3.6 The use of Amateur radio operators in any local government
- is established by only one agency by and for that government.
- (Reference FCC S97.169(b), S97.177, S97.191, and S97191 et al.)
- Different departments will not operate separate Amateur radio
- programs. All requirements for Amateur radio support will be
- channeled to the county (or city) Radio Officer, as appropriate.
-
- 3.7 State Government RACES organization.
-
- State OES communications coordinators (Telecommunications
- Division assistant chiefs) assigned to an OES Region or Regions
- administer their region radio officer(s). A State OES
- communications coordinator is the State RACES coordinator who, in
- turn, appoints the chief radio officer and deputy chief radio
- officers (North and South). The OES headquarters staff
- coordinates with, but does not direct, the OES Region RACES
- staffs. The State OES headquarters has a State RACES Coordinator
- and a State Chief Radio Officer; each of its six regions will
- have a Region Radio Officer. There may be two deputy chief radio
- officers; one for North (OES Regions 2,3,4 and 5) and one for
- South (Regions 1 and 6). Region Radio Officers report to their
- respective Region Communications Coordinators. All are a part and
- resource of the State OES Telecommunications Division. In the
- absence of the region communications coordinator, a region radio
- officer reports to the OES Region Manager. Region radio officers
- promote the development and utilization of the Amateur Radio
- resources, RACES plans, and RACES organizations throughout the
- Region; provide a resource management capability for mutual aid;
- and maintain close liaison with ARRL officials.
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- Region radio officers appoint and manage their assistants and
- staff. They coordinate with county radio officers but have no
- direction or control over them. Region radio officers report to
- their OES Region communications coordinator and/or the Region
- manager.
-
- 3.8 Radio Officers at all levels will appoint a staff to assist
- them in properly carrying out a viable RACES program capability
- to support their jurisdiction. Assistant radio officers should be
- appointed to (a) serve in the absence of the radio officer in an
- emergency and (b) to carry out day to day administrative
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- functions. The latter may include training, administration,
- personnel, operations, maintenance, public relations, et cetera.
- State OES has prepared written job descriptions for radio
- officers and operators that may be used by all levels of RACES
- management; they may be modified and expanded to meet local
- requirements.
-
- 3.9 The Radio Officer is the principal management volunteer
- through whom the local government jurisdiction employs RACES
- resources. In this regard the jurisdiction should support the
- position with work space, clerical, mailing, telephone use and
- other costs or assistance normally associated with program
- management.
-
- 3.10 The Radio Officer and staff is responsible for preparing,
- amending and updating a local government RACES Plan that conforms
- to the requirements of the Federal and State governments.
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- 3.11 The Radio Officer position reports to the RACES
- Coordinator where one is used in the management structure. At the
- local level, the emergency management agency may prefer that the
- Radio Officer report to their telecommunications director,
- operations manager, or similar position in the agency or in
- another department of the same county or municipal government. If
- a RACES coordinator is employed, it is recommended it be a
- position oriented towards emergency operations and preferably not
- a position limited primarily to the technical or maintenance
- functions in telecommunications.
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- 4.0 RACES PLANS
-
- 4.1 State OES provides the guidelines and format for the RACES
- Plan. The local governments and the six State OES Regions must
- adapt the format to satisfy their unique needs. These factors
- should be kept in mind when selecting and appointing Radio
- Officers.
-
- 4.2 RACES Plans will address both wartime and peacetime
- applications.
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- 4.3 Much of the old RACES plan format contained temporary,
- perishable, operational and otherwise variable information that
- made them unwieldy and cumbersome to amend. The new California
- format moves this type of information into annexes which the
- jurisdiction may more readily update and issue as required. The
- basic plan body will include a signatory page (see para. 4.6).
- The annexes will not require a signatory page, thereby
- facilitating amended pages as often as required with the least
- burden. Names, rosters, resources, frequencies and other
- perishable information will henceforth appear in appropriate
- annexes or standard operating procedures in accordance with the
- State's model plan.
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- 4.4 All radio Officers will coordinate frequencies through their
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- OES Region prior to writing or amending frequencies in any plan.
- Inter-region coordination will also be accomplished, where
- required, before transmitting the plan to State OES headquarters
- through their appropriate Region headquarters.
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- 4.5 Every county RACES plan must address three basic levels of
- communications:
-
- 4.5.1 Intra-government requirements.
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- 4.5.2 County to city governments; i.e., EOC to EOC.
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- 4.5.3 County to Region. Note: Counties do not normally comm-
- unicate directly to State OES headquarters in Sacra-
- mento but to their appropriate Region headquarters.
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- 4.6 Every RACES Plan will have a concurrence/approval signatory
- page for the signatures and date of the following positions:
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- 4.6.1 City RACES Plans:
-
- City Radio Officer
- City Communications Officer (if any)
- City OES Coordinator
- County Radio Officer
- State OES Region Radio Officer
- State OES Region Communications Coordinator
- State RACES Radio Officer or Coordinator
-
- Local administrative practices may require
- additional signatories but they are not required for the State
- OES copies.
-
- 4.6.2 County RACES Plans:
-
- County Radio Officer
- Communications Director (if applicable)
- OES Coordinator
- State OES Region Radio Officer
- State OES Region Communications Coordinator
- State RACES Radio Officer and Coordinator
-
-
- Local administrative practices may require additional
- signatories but they are not required for the State OES copies.
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- 4.6.3 State OES Region RACES Plans:
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- Region Radio Officer
- Region Communications Coordinator
- State Radio Officer
- State RACES Communications Coordinator
- Telecommunications Division Chief or Deputy Chief
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- 4.6.4 State RACES Plan:
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- Each Region Communications Coordinator
- State Radio Officer
- State RACES Coordinator
- Chief, Telecommunications Division
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- 4.7 "Operational Area." Wherever the term "Operational
- Area(s)" appears, substitute the actual name of the jurisdiction
- wherever possible. The term "Operational Area" has little
- meaning for most readers outside of the Emergency Services
- organization; the jurisdiction name, on the other hand, is
- readily understood.
-
- 4.8 Packet frequencies. It is preferable not to include packet
- radio frequencies in your plan because they tend to be temporary
- and subject to one or more changes before another RACES plan or
- appendix is issued. Packet frequencies, more often than not, are
- determined at the time of the incident to best serve the
- particular mission.
-
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- 5.0 ENROLLMENT REQUIREMENTS
-
- 5.1 APPLICATION. Applications to the RACES are made by Amateur
- radio operators to the city, county or State OES office of their
- choice. The application will include the form prescribed for
- registering State of California disaster service workers and the
- loyalty oath (Govt. Code sections 2015, 3102, 3211, 8589 and the
- California Emergency Council Rules & Regulations). Applicants
- will be registered in the "Communications" class of disaster
- service workers. A city, county, or the State may require the
- completion of other applicable forms.
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- 5.2 "COMMUNICATIONS" CLASS. The California Emergency Council
- Rules & Regulations describes this class of disaster service
- worker (section C3) as:
-
- Communications. Operate and maintain various comm-
- unications systems, including wire and radio facilities,
- and perform messenger service, to assist officials and
- individuals in the protection of life and property.
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- 5.3 LOCAL RECORD CHECK. All applicants for the RACES will be
- free of felony convictions and subject to background check
- verification. RACES personnel are different from the average
- Disaster Service Worker in that they have access to valuable
- government property; may serve in areas where access is
- restricted to personnel requiring law enforcement background
- clearances; frequently have access to restricted or confidential
- information and records; will handle messages of confidential
- content; and are highly visible to the public, where their
- deportment and actions must reflect favorably upon their office
- of authority at all times.
-
- 5.3.1 Authorization to Release Information. Each local
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- government will prepare a form with this title and the
- following statement:
-
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- "As an applicant for the position of Radio Amateur
- Civil Emergency Service operator with (name of
- government), I am required to furnish information
- for use in determining my qualifications. In this
- connection, I authorize release of any and all in-
- formation that you may have concerning me, includ-
- ing information of a confidential or privileged
- nature.
-
- "I hereby release you, your organization, or
- others from liability or damage that may result
- from furnishing the information requested. This
- release will expire 60 days after the date
- signed.
- "Signed___________________________
-
- "Date_____________________________"
-
-
- (Applications will not be processed without the applicant signing
- and dating the Authorization to Release Information. A sample
- Release Form is available from any State OES office.)
-
- 5.3.2 Upon receipt of a completed application for the RACES
- with the release form (above) and a copy of the applicant's
- Amateur radio license issued by the Federal Communications
- Commission, the local OES will request a record check by its law
- enforcement agency; city OES agencies will direct the request to
- their chief of police, counties to their sheriff, and State OES
- offices to State OES Headquarters.
-
- 5.4 IDENTIFICATION CARDS. Upon recommendation for acceptance by
- the proper law enforcement office (para. 5.3), the appropriate
- OES will issue the applicant an identification card or written
- RACES certification.
-
- (a) There are two levels of RACES participation. LEVEL 1
- personnel are those who are regular volunteer staff of this RACES
- unit, they have accepted a job responsibility, and have agreed
- that the RACES is their primary Amateur Radio emergency response
- activity. It is recommended that LEVEL 1 staff volunteers be
- issued a government ID card the same as or similar to that used
- for its regular employees.
-
- State LEVEL 1 RACES personnel are issued a State OES
- identification card the same as or similar to that of employees
- and a laminated Registered Disaster Service Worker photo ID card.
- State OES does not issue permanent ID cards to its RACES
- personnel until after a minimum 180 days probation period. This
- practice is recommended to all local governments.
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- (b) LEVEL 2 volunteers are those who choose not to serve as
- staff but may be available to work in some emergency. LEVEL 2
- personnel are not issued a government identification card the
- same as or similar to that of employees. They may be issued a
- generic Registered Disaster Service Worker card.
-
- 5.4.1 It is recommended that the ID card be the same as that
- used by the agency or local government concerned, since that card
- is readily recognized by the jurisdiction involved.
-
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- 5.4.2 It is recommended that the expiration date be three to
- five years hence, and that no identification card or
- certification be marked "indefinite".
-
- 5.4.3 Identification cards are the property of the government
- concerned. They will be surrendered to that government upon
- termination as a volunteer with its OES, for misuse of the ID
- card, misconduct or for cause. The volunteer should sign a
- statement to the affect that he/she understands the terms and
- responsibilities of being issued a government ID card and serving
- as a volunteer employee of that government.
-
- 5.4.4 It is recommended that an ID card consist of a full
- face (passport style) photograph and that all ID cards be
- laminated. Consider using the style with the cutout and clip for
- wearing on an outer garment while working in an EOC,
- communications center, or other controlled facility.
-
- 5.4.5 The State does not issue a general, statewide identifi-
- cation card nor does it contemplate one in the future. The
- control over individual ID cards is necessary to the successful
- employment of such cards. This is not practical with a generic,
- mass produced card.
-
- 5.5 Volunteers must sign on and off duty, and/or be recorded by
- an appropriate official of that government, whenever serving in
- any function such as drills, training, exercises, work parties or
- actual operations. Said record must contain the name, date and
- time on duty, and date and time off duty. Records will be
- retained by the appropriate office of emergency services for a
- period of not less than one (1) year.
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- Rev. 4 Level 1 and Level 2 volunteers defined in para. 5.4.
- Rev. 5 Paragraph 2.5 added April 15, 1992. Para. 4.7, "Operational Area(s), and para. 4.8, "Packet
- frequencies" added. Para. 3.6 clarified; i.e., one government may have only one RACES.
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