Emergency Communications (Voice) for Everyone
What is Emergency Communications? Emergency Communications is when a critical communications system failure puts the public at risk.
September 11, 2001
Northeast US Power Outage 2003
Hurricane Katrina 2005
Hawaii Earthquake 2006
Wireless Voice Communications Cell Phone Satellite Phone CB FRS GMRS Amateur Radio
Cell Phone Shared infrastructure with Telephone (landlines) When telephones are out, cell phones usually are too Short range (Cell tower must be relatively close) Battery life limited Call volume overload very common in emergencies Cell phone inexpensive $ “Air Time” usage can get expensive
Satellite Phone Utilizes Satellites orbiting Earth Requires working telephone at other end Battery life limited, cannot receive calls when “off” Call volume overload possible in emergencies Coverage includes entire United States Cannot be used indoors Satellite phones expensive $$$ “Air Time” usage is very expensive
CB Citizens Band Radios Been around for years Radio Equipment: not expensive $$ 5 watts legal limit Range: 4-5 mile range (normally) 40 Channels Channel 9 – for Emergencies only FCC license not required Most conversations not fit for family consumption!
FRS Family Radio Service Radio Equipment: Inexpensive $ Millions in use! Very low power – ½ watt range (1-2 miles unobstructed) 14 channels No FCC license required
GMRS General Mobile Radio Service Readily available Radio equipment: Not very expensive $$ Power: 5 watts maximum Range: 5-25 miles Extended by Repeaters Channels 7 shared FRS channels plus… 8 GMRS Repeater channels FCC License required Covers the whole extended family $85 for 5 years
Amateur Radio (‘Hams’) FCC License and call sign required to transmit on Amateur Radio Bands (no cost) Written Examination ($14) required for license Technician General (plus Morse Code requirement) Amateur Extra Lots of Amateur Radio Frequencies Power: 1,500 watts on some bands Range: worldwide on some bands Wide range of cost for equipment, hand held radio can be relatively inexpensive $$$
Emergency Communications Amateur Radio in Action Hurricane Katrina - September 2005 Northeast blackout - August 2003 Shuttle Columbia recovery effort - February 2003 World Trade Center and Pentagon terrorist attacks- September 2001 Hurricane Floyd - September 1999 Oklahoma City Bombing - April 1995 Amateur Radio Operator WTC 2001
Radio Basics (GMRS) Repeaters Duplex vs Simplex Privacy Tones (PL) Normal Radio Etiquette Emergency Communications Etiquette GMRS Call Sign Required GMRS Net GMRS Radio (one example)
What is a Repeater? A Repeater rebroadcasts the radio signal, thus increasing the distance you can communicate.
Duplex: GMRS Repeaters Channels Listen Freq Talk Freq MHz MHz MHz MHz MHz MHz MHz MHz MHz MHz MHz MHz MHz MHz MHz MHz
Simplex: GMRS & FRS Shared Freq Channels Listen Freq & Talk Freq FRS MHz National SOS Channel FRS MHz FRS MHz FRS MHz FRS MHz FRS MHz FRS MHz (GMRS 5 Watts Allowed )
Privacy Tones Privacy Tones or Privacy Codes or PL or CTCSS or Tone Squelch Like an Electronic Filter You do not hear them But they can still hear you
Privacy Tones Repeater (Duplex) Standardized for LV Valley PT: Hz on Talk Freq (Required for Repeaters to Hear You!) PT: Hz on Listen Freq (Filters out others talking) FRS Shared Channels (Simplex) No Privacy Tones – Recommended
Las Vegas Valley GMRS Repeaters GMRS Repeater Channel #6 National Calling Frequency REACT (LVMPD Volunteer Org) Monitoring Dispatch REACT personnel Not for normal chit-chat Move to another GMRS Repeater Frequency
GMRS Repeaters GMRS repeaters are private property GMRS frequencies are shared frequencies, but repeaters are not Use of repeaters is with owners permission
GMRS Communications Etiquette Listen before you transmit. Make sure you aren’t interrupting a conversation.
GMRS Communications Etiquette Do not use the radio to advertise the sale of goods or services.
GMRS Communications Etiquette Use lowest power needed to communicate FRS (1/2 watt) GMRS simplex GMRS repeater
GMRS Communications Etiquette Do not use obscene, indecent, or profane words, language, or meaning.
Emergency Communications Etiquette Good News - You’ll be heard by anyone monitoring the radio frequency! This increases your chances of getting the help you need. Bad News - You’ll be heard by anyone monitoring the radio frequency! No radio communication is truly private, so don’t broadcast sensitive information.
Emergency Communications Etiquette Use plain language. Although you may know the meanings of all the “10 codes” and other radio jargon, the folks you’re trying to talk to may not, or they may know a different meaning altogether.
Emergency Communications Etiquette If you must interrupt for a bona fide emergency, say “Break for a medical emergency” or other appropriate language. The other parties should yield the frequency to you or attempt to assist.
GMRS Call Sign Requirement GMRS requires FCC Call Sign Every GMRS station must transmit a station identification: (1) Following the transmission of communications or a series of communications; and (2) Every 15 minutes during a long transmission. ( FCC code Part )
GMRS Net Every Monday night Check-ins start around 7:15 pm Currently on GMRS Repeater channel #7 ( MHz) Great time to test your radio equipment on the GMRS repeaters Get to know other GMRS operators Some are with Volunteer Organizations Some are even Amateur Radio operators
GMRS Radio Equipment ICOM IC-F21GM Radio 16 channels 8 GMRS Repeater Channels 7 GMRS / FRS shared channels Channel 16 – Scan all Channels $130 at Amateur Electronics Supply Optional: Extra AA Battery Pack Lithium-ion Battery Pack Headset with Microphone
Emergency Communications is Teamwork
THE END QUESTIONS???