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- From : W6HIR @ WA6NWE.#NOCAL.CA.USA
- To : RACES @ ALLUS
- Date : 911004/1650
- Msgid : $RACESBUL.190
-
-
-
- TO: ALL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCIES/OFFICES VIA THE ARS
- INFO: ALL RACES OPERATORS IN CA (ALLCA: OFFICIAL)
- ALL AMATEURS U.S. (@ USA: INFORMATION)
- FROM: CA STATE OFFICE OF EMERGENCY SERVICES (W6HIR @ WA6NWE.CA)
- 2800 Meadowview Rd., Sacramento, CA 95832 (916)427-4281
- RACESBUL.190 DATE: October 7, 1991
- SUBJECT: DRILL OR EXERCISE REALITY, PART 3/3
- (By April Moell, WA6OPS. Conclusion)
- 8. You are not likely to handle much traffic. In a drill
- most people rarely simulate the kind of phone stress they would
- have in a real incident. Whether you are in a drill or the real
- thing, you are a support communications system. YOU ARE THERE
- JUST IN CASE. QUALITY, NOT QUANTITY, IS WHAT MATTERS. If you
- are on duty for three hours and handle only one message -- it was
- still important and worthwhile for you to be there. If you can
- get the one message through that they need -- YOU ARE VALUABLE.
- 9. The more exposure volunteers have to the agency they
- serve, the easier it is for all concerned when we are activated.
- ###
- The preceding was prepared by April Moell for the Hospital
- Disaster Support Communications System in Southern California.
- Throughout you can see the importance of the necessity for
- reliability, dependability, performance, and knowledge of the
- served agency by its volunteers. There are some volunteer
- activities that require little or no prior knowledge of the
- served agency by a volunteer. This is NEVER the type of
- volunteer we address in the weekly State RACES Bulletins and
- other publications. Like the hams and other volunteers who serve
- the hospitals, they must be a part of the served agency system
- BEFORE the emergency strikes. Such a volunteer seeks out an
- agency or organization ahead of time. They then serve because
- they WANT TO as a part of an agency, an organization, or a system
- as a team player. There simply is no room for loners. The days
- of simply sitting down to any radio, anywhere, with no knowledge
- of the served agency are gone. New people learn the system and
- the procedures. So do the old timers or they lapse into
- retirement.
- Probably one of the most frustrating statements from a soul
- who stands up at a recruiting session for emergency
- communications specialists is, "I've been a ham for over forty
- years. What in the world can YOU possibly teach ME?" Again,
- thanks to April and the other professionals who send us Bulletin
- material.
- As retired Hawaii State RACES Radio Officer Henry Gamache,
- KH6AIN, once said, "Just because you're an Amateur doesn't mean
- you don't do a professional job."
-
- EOM
-