JUMP KITS FROM A-Z. AC POWER POWER CORDS HF ANTENNA.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
HURRICANE SEASON 01 JUN – 30 NOV ARE YOU READY? THE TIME TO PREPARE IS NOW!
Advertisements

Let’s Be Ready Chickaloon Village Youth Safety Preparedness Lesson.
Jeopardy: Community Resource Fair Disaster Plan BEFORE DURING AFTER EMERG KIT Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Final Jeopardy.
1 Tornadoes Preparing for the Storm and its Aftermath A Presentation By Gary Braman North Alabama Chapter American Society of Safety Engineers North Alabama.
Amatuer Radio Emergency Services Our role in the Joplin Disaster.
ARES and RACES Emergency Communications Procedures Training LINCOLN COUNTY ARES / RACES PROGRAM.
By: Alex Laurenza. Know What Hurricane WATCH and WARNING Mean WATCH: Hurricane conditions are possible in the specified area of the WATCH, usually within.
EG1003: Introduction to Engineering and Design Lab Safety Guidelines.
 Violations of the following regulations WILL result in a loss of lab points.
Preparing Your Flood Kit. What’s a Flood Kit? An emergency kit that would really help, if there was a flood in your home. A Flood kit is very important.
1 Authored by John W. Desmarais Updated 10-Jun-2005 Modified by Lt Colonel Fred Blundell TX-129 Fort Worth Senior Squadron For Local Training Rev Jan-2014.
Emergency Preparedness. Potential Emergencies at Cummins Types – Fire Serious injury (loss of life or limb) Tornado, flood, severe weather Large chemical.
Laboratory Safety Rules OR: How to get out of this class alive.
Achieving Greater Success in Emergency Management by Preparing & Planning with Public Works.
Francois Botha ZS6BUU SOUTH AFRICAN RADIO LEAGUE EMERGENCY COMMUNICATION NETWORK H A M N E T.
US Army Corps of Engineers BUILDING STRONG ® Army Corps of Engineers – Information Technology (ACE-IT) Enterprise Emergency Response Team (EERT) Briefing.
Emergency Preparedness
The Go Kit. 05/21/2005The Go Kit1 Go Kit Versions There are many similar versions of the go kit on various ARES Web sites Commonly broken up into levels.
Developed by NFPA. Funding provided by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Office of Domestic Preparedness. Sparky® is a registered trademark of.
1CUL.PPT Last Revised: 10 June 2005 The Role of the Communications Unit Leader Developed as part of the National Emergency Services Curriculum Project.
Amateur Radio: A Bright Spot During Power Loss The Role of Ham Radio in the 2003 Northeast Blackout Haritha Pula.
A mateur R adio E mergency S ervices & D isaster S ervices T echnology.
Butte County Office of Emergency Management. The “Basics” Be Informed Make a Plan Build a Kit Family Communications Plan.
Introduction to Emergency Communication Course Topic 17– Preparing for Deployment.
Personal Safety Take Responsibility. 2 Section I Introduction.
Safety and Rules of the Lab
Lab Safety The Does and Don'ts.
Preparing for Disasters ■Disasters in NC ■ Plan ■ Emergency Kit Revised 10/2013.
Which one calculates Net Worth?
Houser Kindergarten “Soaring To SuperHero Heights” Parent Information Night 2013.
Power Outages and Emergency Communications November 13, 2012.
“Getting the message through”
OKALOOSA COUNTY ARES®/RACES Red Cross Shelter Special Care Facility Hospital Radio Operators Guide EOC Updated August 13, 2010 Bob Walker, N4CU 2010 Hurricane.
1CUL.PPT Last Revised: 10 June 2003 The Role of the Communications Unit Leader Developed as part of the National Emergency Services Curriculum Project.
Preparation  Be sure your family knows: Different types of emergencies and their appropriate responses Which emergencies are more likely to affect your.
1 Be Red Cross Ready American Red Cross Greater Cleveland Chapter Serving Cuyahoga, Geauga and Lake Counties.
Terrorism. General Guidelines Be aware of your surroundings Leave if something does not seem right Take precautions when traveling.
Fulbright ETAs Things to know about Living in Yilan Kelly ^_^
Safety and Rules of the Lab. Safety Symbols Know safety symbols They appear in your laboratory activities They will alert you to possible dangers They.
Arlington County RACES David Jordan Chief Information Security Officer OEM Emergency Support Function #2 Lead.
SOUTHWESTERN ALABAMA ARES GROUP EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS TRAINING.
SOUTHWESTERN ALABAMA ARES GROUP EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS TRAINING.
Unit 2: Fire Safety and Utility Controls
HURRICANE KATRINA AND BEYOND November 2, 2006 Earl J. Crochet – Director Field Operations.
Lab Safety Rules. Safety Symbols Know safety symbols They appear in your laboratory activities They will alert you to possible dangers They will remind.
PLANNING FOR EMERGENCIES.  SELECT ASSEMBLY POINTS. Identify at least two safe assembly points. A safe assembly area may be a neighbour’s house, a shop,
Partial lesson 15 of 32 slides Trip Planning and Map Reading.
Breast Pump Policy Presentation to: Nutrition Services Directors and Breastfeeding Coordinators Presented by: Julianne Gaston MPH, RD, LD and Pat Cwiklinski.
Washington County ARES December Visitors  Please leave an address on the sign up sheet.
SAFETY DHO Chapter 12. MSDA Product Hazards Handling precautions Procedure after spill or fire Hazardous ingredients Transport precautions Emergency phone.
Lab Safety Guidelines.
For local disaster. Pre Storm Preparation Family Communication plan Have all contact information in one physical location Have a person out of state be.
Reference: Diversified Health Occupations. Required by many health care facilities To be worn when lifting or moving Effectiveness is controversial, reminds.
DISASTER PREPAREDNESS AND SAFETY EADY_CROSS_READY.
ACS ACTIVATION. The first section of this presentation describes the initial activities of the ACS Staff. The second section describes the initial activities.
Lessons Learned Response and Recovery in a Disaster Robert DiLossi Director, Crisis Management
Use of CAP Radios on Federal Installations Produced by the Southeast Region Communications Team in cooperation with the AFAUX/CAP Spectrum Manager.
Emergency Preparedness. Proposed Emergency Preparedness Rules NFR/LMC §19.326(a) deleted and moved to § for Emergency Preparedness Rules Places.
CERTNET.
Prepare for the Unexpected
GIRLS LOCKER ROOM PROCEDURES
EG 1003: Introduction of Engineering and Design
Book Signing / Trade show speaker events
Biology Safety Guidelines
EG1003: Introduction to Engineering and Design
Residental Disaster Plan
The Role of the Communications Unit Leader
EG1003: Introduction to Engineering and Design
Vehicle Safety Check your vehicle before heading out for the day:
PREPARE FOR DEPLOYMENT
Presentation transcript:

JUMP KITS FROM A-Z

AC POWER

POWER CORDS

HF ANTENNA

THE HF STATION

THE VHF STATION AND ANALYZER

J POLE ANTENNA WITH MAST

COMPUTER AND TNC

ADAPTERS AND FUSES

ELECTRICAL TOOL KIT

PAPER STUFF

WATER AND COOLER

FOOD

LIVING GEAR

LIVING GEAR WITH P-38

CLOTHES AND OTHER ITEMS

JUMP CHECKLIST I. PREDEPLOYMENT – A. Equipment-see lists 1. Radio 2. Personal gear 3. Tools B. Training 1. Practice deployments 2. Radio communications-simplex 3. Message writing – C. Identify 1. Jump team members 2. Vehicles

II. ALERT – A. Alert team – B. Identify vehicles to take 1. Check oil, filters, tires, gas – C. Collect Jump team kits 1. See jump team lists – D. Contact Affected area point of contact 1. Where to meet, when, directions 2. What to do if no contact-contingency – E. Identify repeater frequencies in the affected area and enroute 1. Program radios

– F. Check 1. radios for operation 2. Antennas 3. Frayed, broken wires – G. Fill 1. Spare gas cans 2. Water bottles – H. Get 1. Cash 2. Credit cards, ATM 3. Phone cards 4. ID cards – ARES – Red Cross 5. Tracker number

III. ENROUTE – A. Establish communications with 1. Home repeater 2. Affected area repeaters as soon as possible 3. Repeaters enroute-especially last repeater before entering affected area – B. Gas up immediately before entering affected area – C. Vehicle breakdowns enroute-what to do

IV. IN THE AFFECTED AREA – A. Check into local nets – B. Determine radio situation 1. Repeaters operating 2. Repeaters available for your use 3. Rules for using controlled use repeaters – C. Go to agreed upon location, if possible 1. Meet Point of Contact – D. Assess situation 1. Phones – Cell – Landline – Satellite 2. Power – Commercial – Generator – DC

E. Setup – 1. Station Radio Antenna(s) Generators – 2.Check into local net(s) – 3. Find place to Eat Sleep – 4. Find Latrine Water Gas

F. Splitting up Jump Team – 1. Going to other locations – 2. Who is going G. What to do – 1. If no communications – 2. If lost

V. STANDDOWN/REDEPLOY – A. Authority/notice to shut down 1. Who can tell to shut down 2. When 3. Complete/partial – B. Packing up 1. Disposal of trash, wastes 2. Shutting down generators – C. Checking out of local nets – D. Check out with point of contact 1. Home address, phone numbers – E. Missing equipment 1. Identified

F. Leaving – 1. Communications with local nets, repeaters, home repeaters – 2. Notify deploying authority of return G. Clean/repair equipment-immediately upon return to home QTH – 1. Store, reinstall – 2. Empty gas cans/generators – 3. Dispose of perishable food, water, wastes. – 4. Do maintenance on car for oil, filters, etc. – 5. Check for broken, frayed, or damaged wires

VI. AFTER ACTION – A. Report to EC or deploying authority – B. After Action report 1. Things that went wrong 2. Things that went well 3. Problems/solutions – C. Attaboys

Hurricane Dennis landfall Sunday afternoon in western Panhandle Special Capital District ARES net on Friday at 8 p.m. on MHz ext 726