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Emergency and Disaster Radio Operating Procedures
From an article by Bill Ozment, W6LSW, CA State Auxiliary Radio Service.
Initially posted as a six-part series that was
first issued beginning 10/28/1991 as CA ACS RACES Bulletins 193-199.
CALLING AND COMMUNICATING TECHNIQUES
The secret to working quickly and efficiently in an emergency net is to use standard
procedures. The techniques presented herein are the most common. It doesn't take much
analysis to see that standards and guidelines must be established and then utilized.
Before you key your mike, gather your thoughts about what you are going to say. Many
hams have a tendency to talk and/or repeat too much. Say what you need to say without
unnecessary repeats. Keep in mind that you must strive to get your message through the
first time.
In general, there are five parts to Calling/Communications. The more serious or complex
the situation, the more important these procedures become. The information printed herein
MUST be practiced until it is second nature.
- FIRST, you MUST give the tactical call of the station you are
calling. This alerts that station that they are being called and
that they should listen to determine who is calling.
- SECOND, say "THIS IS". The called station knows your tactical
call follows. This is extremely important in cases where there
is a lot of confusion or poor signal conditions.
- THIRD, give your tactical callsign. Noalls and not ham radio
calls. Tactical callsigns are important and ham calls are not,
egos notwithstanding.
- FOURTH, give your message. Speak clearly. Don't speak too
fast especially if the message needs to be written down. Pause
after logical phrases. Do not use the word "break" when you
pause. It is confusing, wastes time and has another connotation
in formal message handling. Merely unkey and pause. If the
other station has questions, they should key up and make their
request known. This also permits other stations to break in if
they have emergency traffic.
- FIFTH, end your message with OVER or OUT.
EXCEPTIONS OR VARIATIONS
- It is sometimes permissible to omit the call designator of
the station you are calling BUT only after communications have
been established and no confusion will occur. Don't waste time,
by using superfluous callsigns.
- The term "THIS IS" is used to separate the FROM and TO
callsigns. If, and only if, confusion will not result, omitting
the "THIS IS" phrase is permissible.
- If you are the calling station and you omit your own
tactical callsign, you can create confusion. In certain
situation, such as quick replies between operators, it can be
accomplished without confusion. You must NOT use this
simplification where messages can be interpreted incorrectly.
- Elimination of the words "OVER" and "OUT" is possible
where it doesn't introduce problems. Unkeying after your message
implies "OVER". To comply with FCC regulations, you must give
your FCC assigned call every ten minutes OR at the end of a
series of exchange communications, whichever comes first. Giving
your callsign can imply an "OUT" ending. Should giving your
call cause any confusion, do not hesitate to add the word "OUT".
In HF single-sideband radio, it IS necessary to say the word
"OVER".
RADIO PROCEDURES DURING EMERGENCIES
- Identify yourself at the beginning of each transmission especially where confusion
may result if omitted.
- Identification is a requirement of the FCC. Stations must give a complete station
identification at least once in a 10-minute operating period, particularly when tactical
calls are being used.
- Listen before transmitting. Be sure you are not on the air with someone else.
- Know what you are going to say before you push the mike
button; in other words, engage your brain before you put your
mouth in gear.
- Hold the transmit button down for at least a second before
beginning your message to insure that the first part of your
message is not cut off.
- TALK ACROSS THE FACE OF YOUR MICROPHONE. This technique
makes the communications more understandable. In other words,
hold the face of the microphone almost at a right angle to your
face.
- Speak slowly, distinctly, clearly, and do not let your
voice trail off at the end of words or sentences. Give each and
every word equal force. For some this takes a lot of practice
and conscious effort but do it.
- Never acknowledge calls or instructions unless you
understand the call or instructions perfectly. If you do not
understand, ask for a repeat.
- When you have understood the message, acknowledge the
receipt with the words "copy", "received" or "acknowledged."
The word "copy" is preferred and NEVER the word "QSL."
- The word "break" is never used UNLESS there is an
emergency. Give you call letters to gain access to a net.
- Always acknowledge calls and instructions. Nothing is
more disruptive to the smooth flow of communications than dead
silence in response to a message. If you cannot copy or respond
to the call immediately, then tell the caller to say again or
stand by. Otherwise, acknowledge each call immediately.
- Under stress, many operators have a tendency to talk too
fast. ACCURACY FIRST, SPEED SECOND.
- At times, radio conditions are poor and words must be
overly exaggerated to be understandable. In general, speak very
slowly and distinctly to carry through static and weak signals.
- If your are relaying a message for another person, be
sure you repeat the message exactly, word for word as it is given
to you. If it makes no sense to you, get an explanation before
you put it on the air. If necessary, refer the message back to
the originator for clarifications.
- There is no place for "Q" signals during official and
emergency communications. They are too easily misunderstood,
rarely save time, and often result in errors.
- Do not act as a relay station unless Net Control, or
another radio station, asks for a relay -- and you can fulfill
the requirement with your station.
- When transmitting numbers (house numbers, street &
telephone numbers, etc.), always transmit number
sequences as a series of individual numbers. Never say numbers
in combinations.
- If a proper name needs to be transmitted, always spell it
out using the ICAO phonetic alphabet. Do not use cute or self-
invented phonetics. There is no place for them in official and
emergency communications. Avoid using the phrase "common
spelling" to reduce confusion.
- ONLY TRANSMIT FACTS. If your message is a question,
deduction, educated guess, or hearsay, identify it as such. Do
not clutter up the air with non-essential information. Be
careful what you say on the air. There are many ears listening.
Many facts will be taken out of context even when carefully
identified.
- If you do not understand the whole message given to you
or if you missed a word out of the transmission, reply with "Say
again." Do not say "please repeat" because it sounds too much
like the word "received" when conditions are poor.
- Chewing gum, eating, and other activities with items in
the mouth tend to clutter up the clarity of your speech. Don't.
- Avoid angry comments on the air at all costs. Obscene
statements are not necessary and are out of place in all communi-
cations.
- Sound alert. Nothing destroys confidence as much as a
bored or weary sounding radio operator. If you are tired, get a
relief operator.
- During an incident, communications suffers enough
confusion without wisecracks and jokes. Amateur Radio may be a
hobby to enjoy, but when providing emergency communications you
must remember that it is serious business and should be treated
as such at all times.
- Stay off the air unless you are sure you can be of
assistance. It does no good to offer advice, assistance,
comments or other input to a net unless you can truly provide
clarification. It is better to remain silent and be thought a
fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt!
- Always know your location. If you are mobile or port-
able and moving around, always keep a sharp lookout for land-
marks. You must be able, if called upon, the accurately describe
your location at any time. This is particularly important if you
with a search team or other mobile units.
- On VHF and UHF frequencies, particularly when on the
fringes of communications, look for a receiving "hot spot" site
and use it. Don't walk around talking while in a communications
fringe area. Repeaters have much more power than your handheld.
Even if you have a good signal from a repeater, it does not mean
you are good going into the repeater.
- If you check into an emergency net, you must monitor on
the net frequency. If you must leave the frequency, ask
permission from the NCS. Report to the NCS when you return to
the net. It is vital that the NCS know the availability of each
station on the net and it is up to YOU to keep the NCS advised.
However, if the NCS is very busy and you must leave the net, do
so without interrupting the net.
- Net Control Stations frequently are very busy with work
that is not on the air. If you call the NCS or dispatcher and do
not get a reply, be patient and call again in a minute or two.
If you have an emergency, say you have "Emergency traffic" after
you identify yourself when you call the NCS. Be patient with the
NCS and other stations.
- A mobile radio (that is one that is mobile, portable,
or airborne) has priority over any other type of radio station
AND other forms of telecommunications. This is true in all radio
services. Fixed station operators must recognize that a call
from a mobile station takes precedence over telephone calls,
personal conversations, and other activities. Respond promptly
to any call from a mobile station -- even if it is to advise the
caller to standby.
In conclusion, these few rules and suggestions are intended to help you become a better
operator -- whether Public Safety or Amateur Radio. Analyze your present operating methods
and try to polish each element so your participation in radio communications is professional
and worthwhile. Your Net Control Station operator may have the final authority but good,
clean operating methods and procedures almost make a net run without an NCS.
The source of this information is on file and is available upon request. It had been
edited slightly for this application. WILLIAM L. OZMENT, W6LSW.
Page Last Updated, 03/05/04
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