SB QST @ ARL $ARLB046 ARLB046 Hams help at site ZCZC AG13 QST de W1AW ARRL Bulletin 46 ARLB046 >From ARRL Headquarters Newington CT April 27, 1995 To all radio amateurs SB QST ARL ARLB046 ARLB046 Hams help at site Hams provide emergency communication at Oklahoma blast site Within minutes of the deadly explosion at the Oklahoma City federal office building, Amateur Radio operators set up an emergency coordination network that has been in non-stop operation since April 19. According to updates from Thomas Webb, WA9AFM/5, during the first few hours after the blast, telephone circuits were jammed and often inoperative. Amateur Radio provided vital emergency communications to rescue and relief organizations until regular telephone service was restored. Located at the Salvation Army Emergency Coordination Center, a net control station coordinated the efforts of more than 20 Amateur Radio stations in downtown Oklahoma City. Volunteer operators were assigned to the five Salvation Army canteens, the Salvation Army Area Headquarters, the Red Cross Command Post, and the primary search and rescue command post. Using hand-held and mobile radio equipment, hams provided relief workers with reliable, mobile emergency communication for more than 190 continuous hours. Besides coordinating the distribution of supplies, food, water and equipment, the volunteer hams also drove vital supplies to locations in the disaster area. During early relief efforts, technical skills of volunteer hams were put to the test when it was determined the buildings in the downtown area were blocking radio signals. A mobile repeater station was established at a Salvation Army canteen, allowing for communications to be sent and received easily. In addition to providing communications to rescue workers, hams at the Salvation Army Emergency Coordination Center continue to process health and welfare inquiries from friends and relatives outside the Oklahoma City area. More than 100 hams have participated in relief efforts, with between 60 and 80 hams working at any one time. Most of the ham volunteers are from the Oklahoma City area, but offers of assistance have come from all over Oklahoma as well as Texas, Arkansas and Kansas. NNNN /EX