Ham radio endangered?

Operators worry antenna rules will hinder emergency work

by mark schreiner

Wilmington Star-News

WILMINGTON — When Hur­ricane Fran cut off Wilmington from the outside world for 72 hours in 1996, it was amateur radio operators who restored the link.
 

During Hurricane Katrina, hams - some of them far from the Gulf Coast - relayed crit­ical messages for hospitals and police after telephone and ra­dio systems failed.
 

But some worry that local zoning regulations and the re­strictive covenants of some communities not only imperil their hobby but also could mean communities across North Carolina won't be ready if there is a "major hurricane, manmade disaster or terrorsm.

 

"During a storm, we're at the emergency operators center, we're at the shelters and we're at the hospitals," said Bill Morine, a financial planner from Wilmington who is a spokes­man for the 21,000 hams across North Carolina. "Where we're not, is in the neighborhoods."
 

New neighborhoods

The reason for that, he and other hams said, is cable television.  With the rise of cable TV in the 1970s, some local governments and nearly all communi­ties with homeowners' agree­ments banned exterior anten­nas and large satellite dishes. That has pushed the hobby, which is shared by more than 740,000 Americans, somewhat underground.

 

For those who live in old Wilmington neighborhoods that don't have covenants, there is little to worry about.

But those amateur radio op­erators who live in newer neighborhoods or other com­munities take chances. Some string wire antennas illegally. Others run coils of wire around their attics, getting in­terference and poor reception.

It puts hams in a bind. Prac­titioners of the century-old hobby have a reputation for professionalism and coopera­tion with the government. Hams hold federal licenses and have participated in emergen­cy communications programs with federal and state govern­ments since World War II But for years, the worries of their neighbors were the sight of an ugly antenna next door and the interference it might cause on their TVs and radios.

Amateur radio operators know what the rules are when they buy a home, said Ham Hicks, a real estate broker and former Wilmington mayor.
 

Lobbying Congress

"It's an issue of education for the legal community and the real estate community," said Hicks, who has had a ham radio license for more than 30 years. "We don't need to fight, we need to educate." Now, hams are mounting a public campaign, as well as a lobbying effort in state capitals and in Congress They   want   neighbors   to know that the same revolution hi miniature electronics that has shrunk their cell phones   ] has made amateur radio equipment smaller and less obtru­sive. Even they oppose eyesore antennas, Morine said. "We're talking about string­ing up horizontal wires that j nobody   can   see   from   the 1 street," he said. They  want  developers  to know they can rewrite their tj covenants to allow amateur radio antennas and still protect property values.  And, they want lawmakers to step hi to make local  planning rules consistent state­wide. Amateurs are trying to get the attention of a new commit­tee in the N.C. General Assem­bly that is studying the state's emergency preparedness plans. The committee had its first meeting last month.  But Morine said the group would like North Carolina to join 21 other states, including some Gulf states, that changed their laws after Katrina that make it easier for hams to get city planning approval for antennas.  The group also backs HR 3876, which would require that private land covenants be no more restrictive than state and local land-use rules. The bill is co-sponsored by Rep. Mike Mclntyre, D-N.C.