Ham Radio
Amateur radio (also called ham radio) is a hobby enjoyed by
about 3 million people throughout the world and over 600,000 in
the USA alone. It is about communications and the multiple ways
of communicating through radio waves.
What most people do not know about this hobby and the people
that are operators is that they are one of the most used groups
as means of emergency communication, when other conventional
means of communications fail, in a disaster situation for
example.
Local communications is one of the first things to go away
in case of a disaster such as hurricanes or tornadoes. Phones
and electricity go down and the only thing left is amateur
radio operators that can operate from a battery and a piece of
wire for an antenna.
These operators have networks set up all over the world that
can be immediately activated and used to coordinate disaster
relief activities. Recent examples include the 2001 attacks on
the World Trade Center, when amateurs worked weeks side by side
with rescue crews supplying communications.
Amateur operators were also involved this last year in all
the hurricanes that we had all over the world. They have been
watching and reporting the advance of the storms, setting up
nets to pass traffic for rescue groups as well as passing
health and welfare traffic to people trying the get in touch
with relatives in the stricken area. They carry a message out
to someone that says we are ok and we are alive and that is
always great.
The National Weather Service might have great radars, but a
radar can't see the storms like human eyes can. Just ask
someone that works for the weather service about the role of
radio operators and you will get one answer- they are the
“eyes” of the National Weather Service. They are on duty any
time that there are storms in the area. Any time of day and
night these people are watching storms and reporting what they
see.
Their accurate reports can be used immediately by the
weather service and further by the local radio and TV stations
which broadcast the reported data to the public.
Amateur radio operators are saving thousands of lives each
year, yet this gets almost no recognition. And the kicker is
that their service is at no cost to the public. As mentioned
before, amateur radio is a personal hobby; this means the
operators buy all their own radio equipment.
And they use it for public safety. Whenever needed to warn
the public of danger.
Are they heroes? Think about it.
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