Saturday March 27, 2010
8:00 AM - Sunday March 28, 2010 2:00 PM
Pulau Aman, Off the west coast of Seberang Perai Selatan, Penang
Pulau Aman or 'Island of Peace'
Already Confirmed: 10 person
21JAN01 – Notification: First Series of the Radio Amateur Examination and Morse Code Test for 2010 21 January 2010 The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (SKMM) will be holding the first series of Radio Amateur Examination (RAE) and the Morse Code Test (CW) for the year 2010. The Morse Code Test (CW) will be held at 10.00 a.m. on 17 March 2010 at the SKMM HQ in Cyberjaya. Applications close at 5.00 p.m. on 5 February 2010. The Radio Amateur Examination (RAE) will be held at 2.00 p.m. on 14 April 2010 at locations in the Northern and Central Regions of Peninsular Malaysia. Applications close at 5.00 p.m. on 12 February 2010. For further details on venue and payment please click below: Notification: First Series of the Radio Amateur Examination and Morse Code Test for 2010 Pemberitahuan: Peperiksaan Radio Amatur dan Ujian Kod Morse Siri Pertama Tahun 2010 CW Application Form/Borang CW RAE Application Form/Borang RAE |
Akta Komunikasi & Multimedia
Akta Komunikasi & Multimedia (1998) Section 238. Pemancaran daripada kelengkapan atau peranti tidak standard Akta Komunikasi & Multimedia (1998) Section 238. Pemancaran daripada kelengkapan atau peranti tidak standard (1) Seseorang yang, dengan sengaja atau tanpa alasan yang munasabah, menyebabkan suatu pancaran radio daripada apa-apa kelengkapan atau peranti yang tidak standard adalah melakukan suatu kesalahan dan apabila disabitkan boleh didenda tidak melebihi lima puluh ribu ringgit atau dipenjarakan selama tempoh tidak melebihi satu tahun atau kedua-duanya. (2) Bagi maksud Bab ini, "kelengkapan atau peranti tidak standard" ertinya apa-apa kelengkapan atau peranti yang tidak menepati standard teknik atau tatacara yang disediakan atau ditentukan di bawah Akta ini.
- KURSUS PERTOLONGAN CEMAS ASAS
- KURSUS SELAMA 2 HARI
- TEORI + PRAKTIKAL + EXAM + SIJIL (JIKA LULUS)
- LOKASI KURSUS DI HQ BSMM CAW. P.PINANG
- TARIKH BERGANTUNG KEPADA HAM ( 2010 LER)
- PIHAK BSMM MENYEDIAKAN JURULATIH TERBAIK DARI LADANG
- TERBUKA KEPADA SEMUA HAM
Emergency Broadcasting
Effective emergency broadcasting is important in some areas where communications may be scarce such as TV or other more commercial radio stations are non-existent.
A great tool for allowing emergency broadcasts and testing of signals are the use of and allocation of emergency frequencies. A ham radio station can effectively use these frequencies every week to test an emergency service, or as in the USA send out ‘Amber Alerts’ in the case of missing persons and other emergency broadcasts such as approaching storms.
Ham radio in effect is not only a hobby, but can be a very important lifeline for many communities.
http://home.gwi.net/~eastcom1/zquad.htm
Who is Regulating Bandwidth and Frequencies?
Ham radio has to comply with the telecommunications regulations of a country to avoid interference with other radio broadcasts and radio communications services such a national radio stations or airport traffic control. This is why the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) sets out certain rules and regulations regarding bands and frequencies used – on occasion a ham operator may get a license to cover a larger area or a particular bandwidth.
The ITU works with a particular nation’s communications authority to regulate the radio frequencies of the country ham radio enthusiasts reside, this helps keep the airwaves safe and clutter free. It also ensures more enjoyment and experience out of using ham radio; after all it would be pointless if a ham radio station was competing for airspace on the same frequency of other ham radio operators in the locality.
Communications and signals depend on allocated bands such as UHF and VHF which allow for great communications and services regionally, whereas shortwave bands such as HF may allow for powerful worldwide transmissions and reception.
SSTV or FSTV television transmissions which broadcast on microwave bands is another effective communications tool some ham operator’s use. Microwave bands are also very effective for high-speed data networks.
ABOUT AMATEUR RADIO
Amateur radio service is defined in the Communication and Multimedia (Spectrum) Regulations 2000 as a radiocommunications service (covering both terrestrial and satellite) in which a station is used for the purpose of self traning, intercommunication and technical investigations carried out by authorized persons who are interested in radio technique solely with a personal aim and without any pecuniary interest.
AMATEUR RADIO OPERATOR'S CERTIFICATE
Regulation 27(1) of the Communications and Multimedia (Technical Standards) Regulations 2000 states that no person shall undertake or conduct any activity in designated skil area unless that person is certified. Amateur radio operator has been gazetted as a designated skill area category under the regulation, hence to operate an amateur radio station a person needs to have an appropriate proficiency and skill i.e. certified in this area.
INTERFERENCE
Please ensure that the radio transmision does not cause interference to any other radio services. Regulation 15(1) of the Communications and Multemedia (Technical Standards) Regulations 2000 states that no person shall intentionally design, install, operate, maintain or modify any communications equipment in a manner is likely to cause interference with, impairment, mulfunction of, or harm to any communications equipment or any other equipment.
Regulation 15(2) of the regulation denotes that a person who contravenes this regulation commits an offence and shall, on conviction, be liable to a fine not exceeding three hundred thousand ringgit (RM 300,000.00) or to imprisonment for a term of not exceeding three years or to both.
To eliminate the potential of interferences, the following procedures must be followed strictly:-
a) Ensure that suffient equipment, tools and test gear is available and can used to monitor and verify that your transmission does not cause any interference to other radio services.
b) You must responsible if your amateur radio is found to be the caused of interference. Immediate remedy action must be taken to rectify the problems in case of interference.
c) Ensure that the transmission do not exceed the level of over deviation.
d) Ensure that the radiated energy is always within the narrowest posible frequency bands for any class of emission in use.
e) The radiation of harmonics and spurious emissions should be suppressed to minimize interference.
What is ham radio?
Amateur radio has its enthusiasts with millions of hobbyists and more serious users around the world. These so called ‘Hams’ use radio technology to broadcast their various radio stations either as a fun venture or as a public service to announce such things as weather events or local news.
Ham radio operators use various forms of radio equipment from large scale more long distance transmission sets to smaller local community radio stations. But one thing all ‘Hams’ have in common is they have a lot of fun with their hobby.
Ham operators need a special license called an Amateur Radio License if they are to use radio frequencies and bands – if not then there could be serious penalties or ramifications associated with misuse of radio airwaves, for example broadcasting over important emergency services frequencies. This is a definite law breaker and can see an operator in jail and given a very heavy fine.

Arthur A. Collins - Story
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Early amateur radio operators were mainly hobbyists, but there was a sense of discovery during the infancy of radio that provided something more. Radio was the new thing, comparable to what computers mean to technological whizzes in the 1980s. And like the computer hobbyists of today who are writing their own programs and building their own equipment, amateur radio operators in the 1920s were contributing to the knowledge of practical aspects of radio art.
One person caught up in the excitement of radio was Arthur Andrew Collins. Born in Kingfisher, Oklahoma, on Sept. 9, 1909, Collins moved to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, at an early age when his father, Merle (or M. H. as he preferred to see it written), established The Collins Farms Company there.
With the Collins Farms Company, M. H. Collins brought new ideas to the stoic profession of farming. The elder Collins reasoned that the efforts of scientists and engineers could do for farming what they did for nearly every other industry in America.
"Why not manufacture food for the American consumer as cheaply as motor cars and radios are manufactured?" M. H. asked in a publication which explained his new ideas. "Why not produce food on a large scale by intensive farming methods in Iowa, where high yields could be obtained and at a low cost?"
The primary object of the farm company was to produce grain at low cost. M. H. Collins felt that too many farmers mixed grain production with livestock raising, and as a result, both were unprofitable.
He implemented his plans by convincing landowners he could improve the profitability of their tenant farms. Farms of 160 to 320 acres were planted to a single crop and were rotated as a single tract in a unit group of farms, each embracing 1,500 to 2,000 acres. Each unit of contiguous farms was put under the supervision of a salaried foreman who directed the tractor operators. The most modern machinery was employed for every operation - four-row cultivators rotary hoes, deep disc plows, two-row corn pickers, fast trucks for marketing crops, and semi-trailers for moving machinery. For maximum use of all this new machinery, electric lights were placed on the tractors, allowing round-the-clock operation. Other practices initiated by The Collins Farms Company included installing drainage tile, erecting fire-proof ventilated grain storage bins, and using legumes to replace nitrogen in the soil.
At its peak the company operated 60,000 acres of farmland in 31 Iowa counties, with wealthy businessman M. H. Collins at the helm of the corporation.
At about the age of nine, Arthur Collins became deeply interested in the new marvel of radio, although at first M. H. apparently did not think highly of his son's tinkerings with radio. Arthur and another early boyhood radio devotee, Merrill Lund, made their first crystal receivers at the Lund home at 1644 D Avenue in Cedar Rapids. The sets used variable condensers inside a tube. Merrill's father worked in the tube department at Quaker Oats Co. and made tubes of the size the boys needed. Using thumb tacks for contact points, they wrapped wire around the tubes. From iron plates they fashioned their own transformers, and rigged a 60-foot spark antenna with a lead-in through a basement window of the Lund home. Merrill's father asked them to find another location for their equipment after lightning struck the radio set and blew it up.
Arthur brought over two coaster wagons and the two boys transported the damaged equipment to the Collins home at 1725 Grande Avenue. Although M. H. did not approve of the mess it was going to cause, Arthur hauled the equipment to his room once his father was out of sight.
"I used a Quaker Oats box to wind the tuning coil and used a Model T spark coil," he told a New York Times reporter in 1962. "The main piece of the station's machinery was the transmitter. Other parts of the station were recruited from a rural telephone service. The way we calibrated was to pick up signals from WWV (the Navy's station in Arlington, Virginia)."
Arthur also used pieces of coal or coke for a rectifier, glass towel racks for insulators and a toy motor. Those early efforts reflected a lot of experimenting that led to successively more reliable, higher-performance radios.
Another boyhood friend in Cedar Rapids who also had an interest in radio was Clair Miller.
"Arthur had big expensive tubes as a kid while all the rest of us had were peanut tubes," Miller told a reporter in 1965.
The article quoted another neighbor's recollection of early days in the Collins family neighborhood: "We sensed that Arthur was different, but we did not know that he was a genius. When the rest of us were out playing cowboy and Indian, Arthur was in the house working on his radios."
One day Arthur's mother invited the neighborhood boys into the Collins home. "I think she did so because she wanted us to realize that Arthur was different from the rest of us. We went upstairs to see what he was doing. He had a room that overlooked the yard. It was loaded with radio stuff. We knew a little about radio. We had been playing around with crystal sets ourselves. But Arthur had one wall covered with dials and switches, everything under the sun."
The Federal Radio Commission, the predecessor to the Federal Communications Commission, passed a radio act whereby amateurs could get licenses. Arthur took the test and got his license in 1923 at the age of 14.
As M. H. Collins recognized his son's talent and ambition toward radio, he looked for ways to help with Arthur's hobby. In about 1924, Arthur's father purchased a new tube costing $135 and other high voltage equipment.
"When I was a youngster there were two real active amateurs (in Cedar Rapids)," Arthur recalled. "One was Henry Nemec and the other was Clark Chandler." Collins and Leo Hruska, another friend who had constructed a crystal receiver, used to receive the stations of Nemec and Chandler, and considered their talks with the more experienced radio operators quite an achievement.
Nemec recalled how he first met the young boy with the extensive radio knowledge. M. H. Collins had asked Nemec to meet with his son so Nemec could teach Arthur some of what he knew about amateur radio, "But there wasn't much that he didn't already know," Nemec said.
In a 1978 interview for an article about Henry Nemec in the Cedar Rapids Gazette, Arthur Collins recalled the early days when he purchased a vacuum tube from Nemec, and several years later when Nemec, who worked for the police department, and another patrolman, Frank Bukacek, parked their squad car in front of Collins' house while the three were inside talking radio. Collins said he, Nemec and Bukacek got together so frequently, and the squad car was parked in front of the house so often, that neighbors began to wonder whether Collins was in some kind of trouble with the police.
At the time there was little formal instruction in the science of radio. Several two-day short courses were given at Iowa State College at Ames, and Arthur is said to have attended the first of these while still wearing knickers. Carl Mentzer later sponsored a course in radio at the University of Iowa. These courses, along with several periodicals, including Wireless Age and QST, comprised most of the current radio knowledge of the time, other than word- of-mouth information.
By the time he was a teenager, Arthur had constructed an amateur radio station using purchased components, make-shift materials and his own ingenuity. Arthur's family had moved to a new home at 514 Fairview Drive, and his equipment moved with him.
circa 1923 By the age of 15, Collins had communicated with other amateur "hams" in the United States and many foreign countries. The custom of exchanging postcards after a contact was made had already been established in the amateur world, and one wall of Collins' attic room was covered with so-called QSL cards.
One card from Australia came from a radio operator who regarded America's prohibition of alcohol as a joke. "How does it feel to stay sober?" were the words the Australian ham wrote to 15-year-old Arthur.
And during a contact with a person in Chile, the South American operator asked to be excused from the radio conversation because a volcano was erupting and interfering with the talk. "He referred to it as if it was in his backyard," Collins told a Cedar Rapids Gazette reporter in 1925.
The reporter, Gladys Arne, had gone to the Collins home to talk with the 15-year-old boy because he had made a radio contact that put him on the front pages of newspapers all over the country.
During the winter of 1924-25, Collins had become familiar with John Reinartz, a 31-year-old German immigrant who was prominent in radio circles because he developed a "tuner" or receiver capable of predictable selectivity and reception. Reinartz had authored several articles on the subject for radio magazines. Reinartz and Collins carried on experiments, particularly in the use of short wavelengths.
Because of Reinartz's radio success, he was chosen as the radio operator for a scientific expedition to the continent of Greenland. The MacMillan expedition set sail from the coast of Maine on the ships Bowdoin and Perry in early 1925. One of the explorers was U.S. Navy Lt. Cdr. Richard E. Byrd.
The plan was for the Bowdoin to make daily radio reports to the U.S. Naval radio station, but because of atmospheric problems, the land station in Washington, D.C., was unable to consistently receive Reinartz's messages.
Then word spread that a 15-year-old boy in Cedar Rapid's had made contact with the expedition.
Throughout the summer of 1925, Arthur Collins accomplished a task that even the U.S. Navy found difficult. Using a ham radio that he himself had built, he talked by code with Reinartz in Greenland night after night. His signals reached the expedition more clearly than any other. After each broadcast, young Collins took the messages from the expedition down to the Cedar Rapids telegraph office and relayed to Washington the scientific findings that the exploratory group had uncovered that day.
Collins' exclusive contact with the expedition soon became a nationwide news story that won him acclaim as a radio wizard. The August 4, 1925 Cedar Rapids Gazette told the story:
"The mysterious forces of air leaped the boundary of thousands of miles to bring Cedar Rapids in touch with the celebrated MacMillan scientific expedition at Etah, Greenland, and wrote a new chapter into the history of radio. Sunday, Arthur Collins, 514 Fairview Drive, 15-year-old radio wizard, picked up the message from the expedition's ship Bowdin, at twenty meters (wavelength), at about 3 o'clock and conversed in continental code for more than one hour. It was the first time the expedition and any United States radio station had communicated at that wavelength. Messages were received by Collins for the National Geographic Society, which is sponsoring the expedition, and for others, and were sent out from here by telegraph. Arthur Collins is the son of Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Collins and is a student at Washington High School. He has been a radio fan for years, and has himself constructed most of his apparatus. His equipment is in a small room on the third floor of the Collins home. His station is known as 9CXX. The local boy told a Gazette reporter today that although he had been in wireless communication with Australia, Scotland, England, India, Puerto Rico, Guam, and Mexico, he never had received a greater thrill than when he talked to his friend on the famous expedition bound northward to explore a mystic continent."
One week later, a follow-up article in the Gazette concluded: "Though only 15, he is true to his trust. For he hopes to realize great radio ambitions, by and by."
At the age of 16, Collins was asked to write a technical article for Radio Age which was published in the May, 1925 issue. One statement in that article foreshadowed the motivational force which was to lead him to "great radio ambitions.
"The real thrill in amateur work comes not from talking to stations in distant lands ... but from knowing that by careful and painstaking work and by diligent and systematic study you have been able to accomplish some feat, or establish some fact that is a new step toward more perfect communication.
Arthur's reputation in the radio world grew. Radio operators around the country who had heard about his contacts with the MacMillan expedition wrote to him to ask how he did it.
Collins continued his electronics education by taking courses at Amherst College in Massachusetts, Coe College in Cedar Rapids, and the University of Iowa in Iowa City.
In 1927, he and two friends organized an expedition of sorts of their own. Collins, Paul Engle, and Winfield Salisbury outfitted a truck with short wave transmitting and receiving equipment and took a summer trip to the southwest states. Using power of 10 watts they conducted experiments in connection with the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C. Leo Hruska stayed behind in Cedar Rapids to operate the base station for the study.
Like Collins, both Engle and Salisbury would later go on to achieve recognition in their particular chosen fields - Engle as a poet and professor at the University of Iowa, and Salisbury as a noted physicist who would make significant contributions to studies initiated by Collins.
In 1930, Collins married Margaret Van Dyke. By the end of 1931 he had set up a shop in the basement of their home at 1620 6th Avenue S.E., previously the home of his grandparents. Arthur began to produce transmitters to order.
When the depression hit with full force in 1931, 23-year-old Collins turned his hobby into a vocation.
"I picked what I was interested in," he told Forbes magazine years later, "and looked for a way to make a living."
This was the first time radio transmitting apparatus, of any power output, was available for purchase as an assembled and working unit. In fact, components were hard to come by; they varied widely in characteristics, and there was little, if any, pattern to their construction. Most hams had their radio equipment scattered around a room, usually in a basement or attic where the sight of tubes and wires wouldn't clutter up living areas of a home. Their equipment was strictly functional, almost to the point of inefficiency.
Collins' ham gear was designed to eliminate the clutter by packaging the equipment in neat units. The concept proved that correctly engineered construction not only stabilized the circuitry but also made its behavior predictable. Collins designed circuits, fabricated chassis, mounted and wired in components, tested, packed and shipped each unit. Because the gear was precisely engineered and well-built with the best parts available, it gave years of trouble-free service.
A later article in the New York Times quoted a ham as saying, "Collins brought us up from the cellar and put us into the living room." The industrial philosophy of Collins products "quality" was established at the very start.
The first advertisement for this new line of products appeared in the January, 1932 issue of QST, with the firm name given as Arthur A. Collins. Two issues later, in March, 1932, the firm name appeared as Collins Radio Transmitters with Arthur's name and call number below. Both notices were two-inch advertisements, but by May the size was increased to six inches. In October the first full-page ad appeared and by December, the firm's name was listed as Collins Radio Company.
Long-time friend Jiggs Ozburn recalled his first meeting with Collins.
"I first met Arthur Collins at a ham club meeting at his house (factory in basement). I hadn't finished high school and he hadn't finished college (he never did). Art had been making ham transmitters for about a year. He was tall and slender and very quiet. He came from a well-to-do family whose fortune was taking a beating in those depression years, so Art was pretty much on his own."
The Great Depression, which began after the stock market crash in 1929, was having a devastating effect on the Collins Farms Company. In 1931, M. H. Collins sold the firm to an east coast insurance company.
Arthur originally started his company as sole owner with only one employee, Clair Miller, who had just been graduated from Iowa State College. But as his business grew, he added personnel, including some who came from his father's farm company. Among them were John Dayhoff and Ted Saxon.
Orders came in and the company grew. In 1933, Collins Radio Company moved out of the basement factory and into leased space at 2920 First Avenue in Cedar Rapids, now headquarters for the local Salvation Army.
Business in general in 1933 was not good, to put it mildly, but radio had come of age, and Collins recognized the need for advancement in the radio communications field.
One Saturday morning that year, Collins telephoned Arlo Goodyear and offered him a job for two months if he was willing to work on Sundays. Out of work for months and with a wife and baby, Goodyear jumped at the opportunity.
"There it was in the middle of the Depression and he was asking me if I minded working on Sunday," Goodyear later wrote. "I would have worked on Shrove Tuesday."
Collins and his work force of one arrived at the building only to discover that neither had a key to get into the basement area, where the company was to begin production the next morning.
Collins looked at the door, looked at Goodyear, and said, "Well, we've got to get going. Catch me so I won't fall on my head." Collins charged the locked door and the new plant got underway with a bang and a shattered front door.
On September 22, 1933, with eight employees and $29,000 in capital, Collins Radio Company became a corporation under the laws of the State of Delaware.
At that time Delaware had some of the most modern corporation laws in the country, and many businesses were officially organizing there, although their actual facilities were located in other states. (On May 13, 1937, the company reorganized as an Iowa corporation.)
Reprinted from "The First 50 Years … A History of Collins Radio Company"
by: Ken C. Braband.
©1983 Communications Department, Avionics Group, Rockwell International,
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
INTERNATIONAL AMATEUR RADIO UNION
REGION 3
FOURTEENTH REGIONAL CONFERENCE
12 – 16 October 2009 Christchurch, New Zealand
Document No. 09/XIV/050
Agenda Item: 10.2.6, 12.6
Emergency Communications in IARU R3 report 2009
Jim Linton VK3PC
Chairman of the Disaster Communications Committee
This report sets out the history and membership of the Committee, briefly lists recent natural disasters and the involvement of radio amateurs, provides a summary of known developments by member societies, re-visits the changes that were made at WRC-03, public relations and emergency communications, a brief report on GAREC-09 and a recommendation for conference to consider on adoption of Centre of Activity frequencies.
Disaster Communications Committee:
This Committee was formed in 2000 on a resolution of the Darwin conference, in early recognition of the growing emphasis on the Amateur Service emergency communications role and the need for a coordinated approach.
The Board of Directors at its meeting 5-7 October 2005, appointed myself as Chairman of the Committee. The current list of e-member societies is:
ARANC, ARRL, ARSI, BDARA, CRSA, CTARL, HARTS, JARL, KARL, NZART, MARTS, ORARI, PARS, PNGARS, RAST, RSSL, SARTS, SIRS, VARS and WIA.
Most of these 20 members have been actively involved in the bi-annual Global Simulated Emergency Tests (GlobalSETS) organised by IARU Region 1. The next GlobalSET will be on 14 November, 1800-2200 UTC and all societies are welcome to participate.
ARSI, CRSA, HARTS, JARL and MARTS have Simulated Emergency Tests within their countries, and ORARI engaging in Tsunami Drill Exercises.
Recent emergencies:
Brunei Darussalam flooding: In January 2009 severe heavy rainfall caused flash flooding, landslides, property damage and power failures. The Brunei Darussalam Amateur Radio Association (BDARA) reported that radio amateurs provided emergency communication to establish contact with remote areas are normal communication systems were disrupted.
Australian bushfires: In January and February 2009 a series of wildfires caused widespread damage to a third of the State of Victoria (VK3), claiming 173 lives, injuring thousands of people, destroying more than 2000 homes, wiping out townships and killing farm animals and wildlife. Both the Wireless Institute Civil Emergency Network and the radio amateur-run communications arm of the Red Cross, RECOM, were engaged for four weeks in providing emergency communications support.
Taiwan disaster: August 2009, Typhoon Morakot passed through Taiwan resulting in that nation’s worst floods in 50 years, the loss of hundreds of lives, thousands left homeless and extensive property damage. The CTARL ARES team in a helicopter also carrying two doctors and four nurses were among the first to reach Chin-Ho that was surrounded by flood waters. The ARES team provided great support during the disaster recovery efforts.
Philippines calamity: September 2009 a tropical storm named ‘Ondoy’ struck causing flooding and landslides, affecting more than two million people and a high death toll. The Philippines Amateur Radio Association (PARA) reported that hams swung into action to help with the relief operations, not only by providing communications but assist with sourcing supplies and donations.
Pacific Tsunami: On 30 September 2009 an 8.3 magnitude earthquake off Samoa triggered a tsunami causing loss of life and widespread destruction that not only affected Samoa but to a lesser extent nearby Tonga. Any involvement by radio amateurs is unknown.
Indonesian earthquakes: A powerful earthquake rocked western Indonesia, trapping thousands under collapsed buildings and triggering landslides. Another earthquake occurred shortly afterwards. The Organisasi Amatir Radio Indonesia (ORARI) advised that hams were active in providing support the emergency Communications in West & South Sumatra. (Full details section f. Disaster Relief in ORARI report to this conference)
Emergency communications capability improvements:
ARCOT: The news media reported that the government of Tonga, through its Emergency Response Plan, now authorised amateur radio participation in conjunction with the Tonga Defence Force, the Tonga Meteorological Service, the Ministry of Civil Aviation and the Tonga Red Cross. Verification of the report is yet to be received from ARCOT.
ARSI: A new emergency radio facility has been established at the Red Cross Society headquarters in Bangalore, which includes HF and VHF transceivers and antennas, operating under the callsign VU2ZH.
CRSA: A big change occurred in 2007 when the government issued the ‘Emergency Response Law of the People’s Republic of China’, and amateur radio gained a formal position in disaster relief, as occurred after the Great Sichuan Earthquake. Among other developments being considered, or planned, is the setting up of five stations nation-wide, and linking them by Voice over Internet :Protocol (VoIP) technology, such as Echolink.
MARTS: In November 2008 it launched its Radio Amateur Civil and Emergency Services (RACES). It is working on a written manual on emergency services to be shared and used by all hams in Malaysia. MARTS RACES conducts simulated emergency tests and other preparations for emergency communications. MARTS previously announced that Motorola Malaysia had installed a five repeater network to create the first nationwide amateur radio system in South East Asia – with the potential to provide communication up to southern Thailand, Singapore, Sumatra's east coast area, and into the Straits of Malacca and the South China Sea.
NZART: The Amateur Radio Emergency Communications (AREC) provides a modular training system and conducts training seminars for those interested in emergency communications. It reports that ‘in the past, amateur radio operators have been able to use and adapt their own private equipment for emergency purposes, but changes in technology, frequency allocations and band specifications dictate more specialised equipment’. The time will come when equipment donations are required to enable the role for the Amateur Service to continue at a high level.
RAST: Building on the recognition of the contributions radio amateurs made in Southern Thailand after the Indian tsunami in December 2004, RAST has been steadily involved in fostering partnerships with agencies. (Full details on page 1 of the ‘Thailand Country Paper’ report to this conference).
WIA: It intends to provide training for radio amateurs involved in, or interested in being involved in emergency communications. While training has occurred through the State and Territory based Wireless Institute Civil Emergency Network (WICEN) groups, plus RECOM and the Specialist Communications Group, the new approach will take this to a much higher level. It will be similar to occupational or workplace training, of a single national standard, and in the future is expected to be a required qualification for anyone wishing to be involved in providing communications to emergency services and government agencies. (Full details page 3 of the WIA report to this conference)
Promotion and public relations:
Thank you to those member societies who have referred to emergency communications in their reports to this conference, or generally promote that activity when the opportunity arises.
It has never been easier to promote any worthwhile amateur radio activity including emergency communications or exercises. A number of amateur radio news outlets are used by some radio societies and clubs around the world to get their message out, in addition to email lists, websites, magazines and newsletters.
Look at a range of amateur radio activities including special event stations, DXpedition or small scale DX entity activations, distance records, awards and contests. This list is not exhaustive but that type of news is of interest to the wider amateur radio community.
In many cases, news of amateur radio involvement in emergency communications is often either delayed for many days, or is not publicised at all. This may be due to a lack of preparation, planning, and making someone responsible for issuing regular reports.
Not only radio amateurs who want to hear this news, but it has the potential of being used in mainstream news media that can help to increase the awareness of amateur radio. Any media plan should also include the capturing images of amateur radio activity and a final report suitable for publication in magazines and on the internet.
And why? To record history, inform and encourage radio amateurs to be involved in the future, so that authorities and decision makers can learn what occurred, and the potential for the wider community to know the role that amateur radio can and does play.
Re-visiting the issue of ITU regulations 25.3 and 25.9A
It continues to be a difficult job to determine whether societies have been able to have their administrations update the national regulations in their country to include the decisions made at WRC03.
Some time ago, in recognition that individual societies needed support on this matter, a ‘Model Provision’ based on an IARU decision, was offered as a ready-made text for those radio societies whose administrations have not updated their national regulations.
[Amateur Stations may be used for transmitting communications international
communications:
(a) on behalf of third parties in cases of emergencies or disaster relief;
or,
(b) on behalf of, or purporting to be on behalf of, third parties in an
organized activity or a training exercise undertaken to expressly prepare
for and meet communications needs during emergencies or disaster relief.]
Policy - background
It is important to appreciate the combination of the ITU regulations 25.3 and 25.9A.
25.3
Amateur stations may be used for transmitting international communications on behalf of third parties only in case of emergencies or disaster relief. An administration may determine the applicability of this provision to amateur stations under its jurisdiction.
25.9A Administrations are encouraged to take the necessary steps to allow amateur stations to prepare for and meet communication needs in support of disaster relief.
If the Amateur Service is to adequately prepare for, and play its role in emergency communications, 25.3 must be applied to the national regulations of individual nations. In order to be able to fully prepare for emergency communications, as encouraged by (25.9A), it is critical that national regulations do not inhibit third party traffic (TPT).
In the absence of advice from member societies, and the lack of responses to a number of written requests for such advice, it can be assumed that a number of nations would still have pre-2003 provisions in their national regulations that prohibit TPT without a bilateral agreement between nations.
Before being able to take part in a cross-border, regional or international simulated emergency test (SET) or the IARU R1 organised Global Simulated Emergency Test (GlobalSET), it is important that national regulations are not a barrier for TPT.
Recommendation: That member societies again be urged to examine the IARU ‘Model Provision’ and review their national regulations to ensure that they reflect the ITU regulations 25.3 and 25.9A decided at WRC03.
Global Amateur Radio Emergency Communications Conference:
The 5th GAREC, with the theme 'Emergency Communications across Borders' was hosted by the Japan Amateur Radio League and held in Tokyo 24-25 August this year, had 29 participants from 14 countries share their knowledge and experiences.
It had participation by representatives of IARU and all three of its regional organisations, National IARU Member Societies and specialised Amateur Radio Emergency Communications Groups from all three ITU/IARU Regions.
From IARU Region 3 were Special Advisor to the Directors Keigo Komuro JA1KAB who chaired the conference, Secretary Jay Oka JA1TRC and Director Shizuo Endo
JE1MUI, and myself. From the IARU, President Tim Ellam VE6SH and Secretary David Sumner K1ZZ attended.
Its final adopted statement, said in part ‘GAREC conferences should continue to be held in locations throughout the world to the extent possible and should maintain the character of GAREC as an informal meeting among representatives of IARU member societies and of Amateur Radio Emergency Communications Groups within or outside of the respective National IARU Member Society, serving as a forum for the exchange of experience and as an advisory body for the work on emergency communications of the IARU.’
In addition to the written report on GAREC-2009 provided to member societies after the conference, I recommend to all interested in emergency communications to read the presentations made at this and previous conferences, and the full text of this year’s official statement, which are on the website www.rientola.fi/oh3ag/garec/
Centre of Activity frequencies (CoA):
The nomination of three CoA frequencies, 14.3, 18.160 and 21.360 to provide intercontinental radio coverage, originated at the Global Amateur Radio Emergency Conference (GAREC) in 2005.
While IARU R1 in September that year did adopt those three frequencies for its region, it also did select 7.060 and 3.760. It was always intended that 80m and 40m frequencies were or are to be decided on a regional basis.
At the Bangalore Conference (Document No. 06/XIII/031) the CoA were only ‘noted’ but not adopted, due to them being misunderstood. IARU R2 has adopted the CoA on 20m, 17m and 15m bands and have additional frequency bands plus two channels on 5MHz.
As a result of my attendance at GAREC-2009, I heard the history and purpose of CoA clarified in a presentation by IARU Region 1 Coordinator of Emergency Communications and organiser of the twice-yearly GlobSET, Greg Mossop G0DUB.
The key points he made were that CoA are not:
• Spot frequencies but a starting point (+ or – 5kHz)
• The only frequencies to be used
• Mode specific and should be considered as being ‘all modes’
Greg G0DUB also noted that there has been some resistance to CoA from some within the amateur radio community partly due to them not being included in band plans.
The IARU R1 has found that 7.060 is unsuitable as a CoA, and is now trialling 7.110. For IARU R3, the frequency 3.760 is not suitable for all societies, and 3.600 appears better suited for the purpose.
Recommendation: Noting that IARU R1 and R2 have already adopted Centre of Activity (CoA) frequencies for emergency communications and training for emergencies, that this conference adopt 3.600, 7.110, 14.300, 18.160, 21.360 as CoA for IARU R3. The regional band plan include those CoA at the earliest possible opportunity and all member societies are urged to have them included in their nation band plans.
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