Hamming it up, just in case
Andrew Glazer
You may live near one of them.
You’d know because they might occasionally pop onto your television or
into your cordless phone conversation. Or maybe you’ve seen the 20-foot
antennae spiking off their homes.
Or you should, because approximately 40 of the city’s ham radio operators
-- once thought by their neighbors as strange or perhaps a bit nerdy --
are poised to become heroes on New Year’s Eve.
“We take great pride that we can pass information over radios independent
of cell phones and police and fire radio systems,” said Gordon West,
co-founder of Mesa Emergency Service Amateur Communication.
Two members of the volunteer group will monitor the world from the city’s
emergency operations center, via portable hand-held radios, to see if
millennium-related computer bugs trigger chaos. Almost 20 others will be
on call at their homes, with both video and audio bands, said group
spokesman Ron Eggers.
“We’ll be listening in on Australia with our ham sets to see if anyone is
saying ‘Omigosh! Traffic signals are out,”’ West said.
Since the radios spit information into the air and not through telephone
networks, they are able to continue broadcasting even if an emergency
were to shut down the phone system. The radios can be powered by
batteries if electricity goes out.
The group formed 20 years ago to help the city’s emergency workers
communicate if fires, riots or earthquakes happened to knock down the
city’s phone lines. They train with the city’s police and fire
departments, which hold regular meetings, seminars and mock emergency
drills.
Most of the ham radio operators started using the devices as a hobby.
“There’s nothing like talking to someone in Auckland, New Zealand while
you’re cruising down the 405,” West said.
But inexperienced tinkerers, they are not.
To be a part of the team, they were required to first pass a federal
amateur radio test. People preparing for the test must take 50 to 100
hours of classes. Each member of the emergency radio team is also
required to spend at least 30 hours a month on the air and must attend
the city’s weekly training program.Now the well-trained unit must wait
for the mysterious clock to strike 12.
“New Year’s Eve is a good opportunity for us to help the city out when
they need it,” Eggers said. “I think people are finally beginning to
realize auxiliary communication can be quite helpful.”
EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS
COSTA MESA
City Hall: (714) 754-5223
Police, fire, medical emergency: 911
Sanitary District 24-hour hotline: (714) 754-5252
Mesa Consolidated Water District: (949) 631-1200
NEWPORT BEACH
City Hall: (949) 644-3309
Police, fire, medical emergency: 911
Water, sewer and street lighting maintenance: (949) 644-3717
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.