[Ncares-admin] Haiti update ARC

Thursday, January 14, 2010 3:21 PM
 
To:
"NC Amateur Radio Emergency Service email list" <[email protected]>, "NC ARES* Admin Net" <[email protected]>
 
Cc:
"TEARA" <[email protected]>, "ARES* of Wake County" <[email protected]>
 
-Here's an update from the ARC on Haiti Relief

WASHINGTON, January 14, 2010 – With estimates that as many as three million people may be affected by the catastrophic earthquake which hit Haiti Tuesday, the American Red Cross is releasing an additional $9 million for earthquake relief, bringing its total commitment so far to $10 million to support relief efforts in Haiti.


Priority needs in Haiti are food, water, temporary shelter, medical services and emotional support.  Thousands of local Red Cross volunteers are aiding their fellow Haitians.  American Red Cross Disaster management specialists are scheduled to arrive today from the United States, Peru and Mexico to join local Red Cross staff already on the ground in the disaster zone.  As soon as airports begin accepting relief shipments, tarps, hygiene items and cooking sets for approximately 5,000 families will come from the Red Cross warehouse in Panama.

The American Red Cross is also helping the injured who may need blood.  More than 100 units of blood and blood products were shipped to the U.S. Naval Air Station in Jacksonville, Florida, and then on to Guantanamo Bay to help Haitian evacuees and patients.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has a plane full of mostly medical items on the way to Haiti from Geneva.  ICRC staff, including engineers, a surgeon and family linking specialists are expected to arrive in Port-au-Prince this morning.  Other Red Cross partners have deployed a mobile hospital, medical teams, and 40 staff to help with sheltering, providing water, sanitation, and telecommunications.

ICRC is helping reconnect separated families in Haiti through a special web site which enables people in Haiti and outside the country to search for and register the names of relatives missing since the earthquake.  In the first twenty-four hours, more than 6,000 people have been registered.

Countless requests have come from people wanting to help.  The best way to do that is to make a donation to the American Red Cross International Response Fund at redcross.org or by calling 1-800-RED-CROSS. Donors can designate their gifts to Haiti relief.  Donations to the International Response Fund allows the American Red Cross to respond to global emergencies and disasters.

In addition, several hundred thousand people have chosen to make a mobile donation.  Donors can text "Haiti" to 90999 on their cell phone to send a $10 donation to support Red Cross relief efforts in Haiti.  The mobile giving effort raised more than $3 million by Thursday morning, and all money raised goes to support Red Cross relief efforts in Haiti.




73 de K4RLC Bob
www.k4rlc.org   "...things that are wired naturally want to go wireless...and things that are wireless want to spread and become ubiqitous all over the planet." E. Haseltine, former Assoc. Director of National Intelligence for Science and Technology.
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ZCZC AX02
QST de W1AW 
Special Bulletin 2  ARLX002
>From ARRL Headquarters 
Newington CT  January 13, 2010
To all radio amateurs

SB SPCL ARL ARLX002
ARLX002 IARU Region 2 Requests Frequencies Be Kept Clear After
Massive Earthquake Strikes Haiti

On Tuesday, January 12 at 4:53 PM Haiti time (2153 UTC), a magnitude
7.0 earthquake hit 10 miles (15 kilometers) west of Port-au-Prince,
the island nation's capital. Communications in and out of Haiti have
been disrupted. No word has been received as of yet from any of
Haitian Amateur Radio operators. The ARRL encourages US amateurs to
be aware of the emergency operations on the following frequencies:
7.045 and 3.720 MHz (IARU Region 2 nets), 14.265, 7.265 and 3.977
MHz (SATERN nets), and 14.300 MHz (Intercontinental Assistance and
Traffic Net).  The International Radio Emergency Support Coalition
(IRESC) is also active on EchoLink node 278173.

IARU Region 2 Area C Emergency Coordinator, Arnie Coro, CO2KK, is
coordinating a multi-national response by hams. There are organized
nets on 7.045 and 3.720 MHz; amateurs are asked to monitor the
frequencies, but to also keep them clear of non-essential traffic.
Amateur Radio operators should also be aware that emergency traffic
pertaining to the Haitian earthquake is expected on the SATERN
frequencies of 14.265 MHz, 7.265 MHz and 3977 MHz, according to
SATERN's leader, Major Pat McPherson. The Salvation Army is
accepting health and welfare traffic requests on its Web site.

"As late as 9:45 PM local time (0245 UTC), we have not been able to
contact any amateur or emergency services stations in Haiti," Coro
said in an e-mail. "Amateurs from Cuba, the Dominican Republic,
Puerto Rico and Venezuela are monitoring the 40 meter band
frequency. We are still keeping watch on 7.045 MHz, hoping that
someone in Haiti may have access to a transceiver and at least a car
battery to run it," but so far. no HH stations have checked in.

Tuesday's quake was felt in the Dominican Republic, which shares the
island of Hispaniola with Haiti, and in Eastern Cuba, but no major
damage was reported in either place.

The January 13 edition of The Daily DX reported that the Rev John
Henault, HH6JH, made contact late Wednesday morning with the
Intercontinental Assistance and Traffic Net (IATN) on 14.300 MHz;
this is the IARU Global Center of Activity frequency for emergency
communications
. He said that he was safe, but had no power and no
phone service. He was operating on battery power and hoping to get a
generator running later in the day. The edition also noted that
Pierre Petry, HH2/HB9AMO -- who was in Cap Haitien (about 140 km
north of Port-au-Prince) is "okay"; Petry is in Haiti working for
the United Nations World Food Program. Later today, he will be
traveling to the capital.

The UN's 9000 peacekeepers in Haiti -- many of whom are from Brazil
-- were distracted from aid efforts by their own tragedy: Many spent
the night hunting for survivors in the ruins of their headquarters.
"It would appear that everyone who was in the building, including my
friend Hedi Annabi, the United Nations' Secretary General's special
envoy, and everyone with him and around him, are dead," French
Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner
said Wednesday, speaking on French
radio. UN peacekeeping chief Alain Le Roy would not confirm that
Annabi was dead, but said he was among more than 100 people missing
in the rubble of its headquarters. He said only about 10 people had
been pulled out, many of them badly injured. Fewer than five bodies
had been pulled from the rubble, he said.

The United Nations said the capital's main airport was "fully
operational" and that relief flights would begin on Wednesday,
January 13.

The situation in Haiti is still chaotic. More information will be
posted as soon as possible. Information is being validated and
shared between many amateur groups and news sources as it unfolds.
NNNN
/EX

 
Paul, Not sure if you are on this email list.  Here is infor re the earthquake in Haiti.
Food for the web.
Talk later, 73
Bill K4Vet


----- Original Message ----- From: "Richard Moseson" <[email protected]
To: "CQ Newsletter List" <[email protected]; "WorldRadio Alert List" <[email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, January 12, 2010 10:38 PM
Subject: [Worldradio-l] Earthquake Net Frequencies - 7045,3720 kHz - Please keep clear


 From the CQ / WorldRadio Online Newsroom:
 
 All radio amateurs are requested to keep 7045 kHz and 3720 kHz clear for possible emergency traffic related to today's major earthquake in Haiti.
 
 International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) Region II Area C Emergency Coordinator Arnie Coro, CO2KK, reports that as of 0245 UTC on January 13, nothing had been heard from radio amateurs in Haiti, but that the above frequencies were being kept active in case any Haitian hams manage to get on the air, and in case of other related events in surrounding areas, including aftershocks and a possible tsunami.
 
 The following is from an e-mail from CO2KK:
 
 A few minutes after the earthquake was felt in eastern Cuba's cities, the Cuban Federation of Radio Amateurs Emergency Net was activated, with net control stations CO8WM and CO8RP located in the city of Santiago de Cuba, and in permanent contact with the National Seismology Center of Cuba located in that city.
 
 Stations in the city of Baracoa, in Guantanamo province, were also activated immediately as the earth movements were felt even stronger there, due to its proximity to Haiti. CO8AZ and CO8AW went on the air immediately , with CM8WAL following.  At the early phase of the emergency, the population of the city of Baracoa was evacuated far away from the coast, as there was a primary alert of a possible tsunami event or of a heavy wave trains sequence impacting the coast line at the city's sea wall ...
 
 Baracoa could not contact Santiago de Cuba stations on 40 meters due to long skip after 5 PM local time, so several stations in western Cuba and one in the US State of Florida provided relays. CO2KK, as IARU Region II Area C Emergency Coordinator, helped to organize the nets , on 7045 kHz and also on 3720 kHz, while local nets in Santiago de Cuba and Baracoa operated on 2 meters.
 
 As late as 9,45 PM local time 0245 UTC we have not been able to contact any amateur or  emergency services stations in Haiti.
 
 Amateurs from the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Venezuela were monitoring the 40 meter band frequency, that I notified to the IARU Region II executive Ramon Santoyo XE1KK as in use for the emergency, requesting that 7045 kHz be kept as clear as possible ...
 
 We are still keeping watch on 7045 kHz hoping that someone in Haiti may have access to a transceiver and at least a car battery to run it.
 
 All information that has so far come from the Cuban seismologists tell us of a very intense earthquake, and also of the possibility of other events following.
 
 Following the advice of the geophysicists, we are keeping the 7045 and 3720 kiloHertz frequencies active until further notice
 
 ------------------
 The editors of CQ and WorldRadio will keep these lists updated with additional information as circumstances warrant.
 
 You are receiving this message because you have signed up for either the CQ-L CQ magazine e-mail newsletter list or the WorldRadio-L e-mail alert list.
 
 
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Haitian Earthquake

Wednesday, January 13, 2010 12:09 PM
 
From:
View contact details
 
 
Cc:
"'Bill Morine - N2COP'" <[email protected], "'Dave Wentzel - KD4ITI'" <[email protected], "'Dewey Cook - KJ4BYU'" <[email protected],
"'Gary Pearce - KN4AQ'" <[email protected]... more
 

NOTE TO THOSE IN THE HAITIAN-AMERICAN COMMUNITY:

 

The Salvation Army is coordinating Health & Welfare inquires for those wondering about the status of people in Haiti in the aftermath of the earthquake.  Go to the following hyperlink http://qso.com/satern/emailfrm.htm  and complete the form.  The Salvation Army will use its extensive Amateur Radio (“Ham”) network to coordinate requests.  Much of the communications infrastructure in Haiti is disrupted, especially around the capital of Port-au-Prince .  Once a request is submitted, it could take 3-7 days or longer for a response to an inquiry.

 

For more information about the role of Amateur Radio in helping with response to the earthquake, please go to www.arrl.org and to www.satern.org  SATERN is the Amateur Radio disaster response network of the Salvation Army.

 

- NNNN

Bill Morine, N2COP

An ARRL trained Public Information Officer

101 Windlass Drive   Wilmington , NC   28409-2030
HOME TEL: (910) 452-1770  CELL: (910) 367-1758
ARRL North Carolina Section Public Information Coordinator (PIC)
Chairman - ARRL National Public Relations Committee
ARRL-The National Association for Amateur Radio™

 

[Ncares-admin] Haiti earthquake

Tuesday, January 12, 2010 10:46 PM
From:
To: "ncares-admin" <[email protected]>

Ladies & Gentlemen, The below web page gives you info on the SATERN network activations, and frequencies.
Just the other day I checked their page, and their normal frequency was 14.265, but noticed tonight that they have changed.  I'm sure there will be a health & wefare frequency set up.

If you hear of any other nets that would be helpful to listen to, please pass it along.

Thanks 73

 

http://www.satern.org/

1/13/10

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1/13/10