The
time period for this S.E.T will be from 0900 hrs Sat Oct 17th to 1400 hrs Sat
Oct 17th.
The purpose of the October 2009
S.E.T. is to provide members of Oregon ARES units an opportunity to practice
their skills in operating the equipment necessary to accomplish the ARES
mission in their county, and to support the overall ARES program in the state.
Additionally, the S.E.T. will provide ARES units and Emergency Manager Staff an
opportunity to formulate a Declaration of Emergency (DOE) and subsequent
Situation Reports (SITREP) using the standard, non-modified ICS 213 form, work
together as a team, and share information about the S.E.T.
One of
the primary elements for this event will be to utilize the installed governor’s
grant equipment at the county EOC.This
will insure the equipment is operational and allow more training in its use for
personnel.
S.E.T. GOALS & OBJECTIVES
The primary
focus for this event will be simple and to the point:
Support the ARES mission in Oregon.
Gain access to and activate OADN
equipment at the county EOC per agreement
Introduce, train, and evaluate new
personnel on the EOC amateur radio equipment
Each county shall identify two county
needed goals or ARES unit specific goals that they would like to see
accomplished. Report these goalsto your DEC
prior to the S.E.T. Complete those two goals/objectives during the S.E.T.
To
help radio amateurs gain experience in communications using standard
procedures and a variety of modes under simulated-emergency conditions.
Exercise, test, and properly use the
governor’s grant equipment, as well as other amateur radio components or
capabilities to meet S.E.T. objectives
Setup and operate from various field sites
in support of the S.E.T. operational plan. This will allow hands-on
training in setting up required communications equipment based on the
tasks at specific locations
Work with county EM to work up
Declaration of Emergency (DOE) for S.E.T.
Properly utilize the appropriate
non-modified ICS forms for operational needs as listed in this document
Test WinLink connections, computer
software, and message handling procedures
Test OEM’s ARU’s ability to handle to a
volume of message traffic, insure that their equipment is operational, and
the ability to get message traffic responses back out the to other
Districts within the state
These objectives will be explained in more
specific detail further in this document.
ORIENTATION
The
primary focus for this event is to exercise the governor’s grant equipment, and
other installed amateur radio equipment.To accomplish this, we need to have as many of the county EOCs activated
as possible, and make contact with other stations in other counties and
districts.
SCENARIO SITUATION
The event scenario
will be a H1N1 swine flu pandemic and the county’s response. The S.E.T.
will start at day number #2 of the actual event.
Since 1999, response exercises and actual experiences have
revealed that the traditional, clinical model
is insufficient in dispensing prophylactic medication to affected populations
in time to minimize disease outbreak and death. Additionally, computer modeling
has shown that morbidity and mortality decreases substantially if prophylactic
medications reach an affected population within the first 1–2 days after
exposure to such biohazards or various diseases.
Counties have developed emergency plans to
rapidly distribute life-saving medications, vaccines and other medical supplies
to the public during a major disease outbreak or terrorist incident.
Our plan calls for setting up Points of Dispensing (POD) clinics at
strategic locations. This exercise will test our procedures for operating at a
POD clinic and our ability to S.E.T. up the needed amateur radio equipment
under temporary field conditions.
County
Emergency Managers’ Offices have requested ARES assistance in providing
communications for their county Public Health Point of Dispensing (POD)
activations, under standard ICS protocol, as they begin to setup inoculation
and screening stations for this event.
The Oregon State Office of Emergency Management (OEM) will
be gathering information and monitoring the situation as this event takes
place.
MISSION
The mission for ARES personnel is to provide effective
multi-mode communications from and between the county EOC, the POD staging
area(s), and the actual POD site, utilizing various modes amateur radio in
order to cover the operational needs of the served agencies.
The operational needs could include passing verbal or
written message traffic, packet traffic, traffic to adjacent governmental
agencies, real time point-to-point communications for operational command and
control, and contacts with other counties and districts within the state of
Oregon.
MISSION CONCEPT
Each county shall complete the followingtasks or elements during this S.E.T.:
Setup
at least three (3) sites for this S.E.T. and one (1) of the sites shall be
operated with emergency power (batteries, solar, or generator) only
County
EOC
POD
staging area
Primary
POD site
Contact
and exchange message traffic with at least two (2) other counties in their
ARES District
Contact
and exchange message traffic with at least two (2) counties in an adjacent
ARES District per the below listed table
Formulate
an exercise message that will be transmitted to a station outside of the
state of Oregon to be relayed to the OR OEM in some appropriate manner
Formulate
and send copies of the Declaration of Emergency (DOE) to the OEM, the
state SEC and their District Emergency Coordinator (DEC) using the plain
text short form DOE from the airmail address book via any workable amateur
radio mode
Utilize
appropriate non-modified ICS forms (as listed in this document) for all
activities as needed to accomplish the S.E.T. goals & objectives
OPERATIONAL SITE
REQUIREMENTS
The following operational procedures shall apply to the
various sites as listed in the Mission Concept statement:
County
EOC: You are to activate your full EOC capability, to include the
governor’s grant equipment, in order to insure completion of goals and
objectives of this exercise
POD
Staging Area: You will work with your county EM to work out an actual site
that might be used in an event as stated in the scenario. This will allow
for propagation checks, equipment setup needs, and actual hands-on setup
experience at that location
Primary
POD Site: You will work with your county EM to work out an actual site
that might be used in an event as stated in the scenario. This will allow
for propagation checks, equipment setup needs, and actual hands-on setup
experience at that location
LIMITATION OF
AMATEUR EQUIPMENT OR NORMAL INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
The below listed items, conditions, or materials shall not
be used during this event:
Electrical
power restrictions at one of the designated operational sites will be in
effect. Emergency power only will be used
at one site.
The
Internet usage will be limited to one piece of traffic using Airmail. This
will allowtraining on how it
works and how to use it, while at the same time insuring that the HF
portion of our capability is utilized properly and everything doesn’t rely
on the internet
The use
of any RMS gateway within the same county by the ARES teams is
restricted/prohibited. Counties must use either a neighbor county’sVHF Gateway or use HF Pactor
UHF
and VHF voice repeaters.
Commercial
telephones
Cellular
telephones
Satellite
telephones
MANDATORY MESSAGE
TRAFFIC ANNOUNCEMENT
During this event ALLmessages shall start with THIS IS AN EXERCISE MESSAGE
and end with END OF EXERCISE MESSAGE. The ICS-213 shall be the
standard message form for this event. The only exception will be if a real life
emergency takes place, the exercise will stop until such time as the emergency
is handled with tactical radio traffic as needed. This is an important issue
since people monitor scanners, police & emergency radio frequencies, and
could over hear our traffic handling during radio transmission.
A good example of what can happen if you don’t use the THIS
IS AN EXERCISE MESSAGE was on 9/11/09. While conducting a routine
monthly exercise which the U.S. Coast Guard intended as
"normal" and "low profile", because of hearing information
on the radio, it wound up instead triggering concerns about the security of the
president on the anniversary of the September 11 attacks. This resulted in
bridges being closed to traffic, Ronald Reagan airport being totally shut down,
and the air corridors around D.C. were closed.President Obama was evacuated from a 9/11 ceremony at the Pentagon. This
was all because people didn’t hear the part of the message stating it was an
exercise. The U.S. Coast Guard is investigating the incident.
MESSAGE TRAFFIC
CLASSIFICATION INSTRUCTIONS
Exercise messages should carry the
word " EXERCISE " before the precedence; that is, " EXERCISE
Routine" ," EXERCISE Priority", or " EXERCISE
Emergency" on phone and " EXERCISE R, P, or E" as appropriate on
CW. The text of such messages should also begin with the words "EXERCISE
MESSAGE."
EMERGENCY OR REAL
TIME EVENT
In the event of a real time emergency, the EC shall be
notified by whoever first becomes aware of the situation, who in turn will
notify the EM. From that point on, all exercise operations shall cease and the
emergency shall be the primary operation in order to reduce the real threat to
life, property, or hazardous situation.
Keep in mind that a real emergency event takes priority over
the exercise. The phrase “THIS IS A REAL EMERGENCY”
shall be the designated phrase that indicates there is an actual emergency in
the exercise area requiring immediate attention.
The EC shall notify the DEC of the situation as soon as
possible by any means available.
DATE / TIME
The date/time format used by the state plain text ICS
format of YYYYMMDDHHMM shall be used for this exercise. EXAMPLE:200909171234. This format will allow for
sorting in a standard ICS-213 and other ICS forms.
CREATURE COMFORTS
Do not rely on your served agency to provide to provide
food, beverages, or other creature comforts. Make sure you have supplies with
you for this event, to include medicines, for at least a 24-hour period. And be
sure to have weather related clothing on hand for possible use.
PHONETICS
Standard ITU phonetics shall be used during this exercise
when needed. All voice transmissions shall be in plain English.
SAFETY
Safety is paramount at all times and is the key
responsibility of each individual. Any person can declare a safety issue. All
safety issues shall be reported to the EC by any means necessary to insure
personnel safety at all times. ECs shall report any safety issues to the DEC as
soon as possible, document the incident in the AAR, and debrief county
personnel with 48 hrs of S.E.T. completion. And if you can’t find the right
forms you need you can do a Google search for the specific fillable ICS form by
number. Example: Fillable ICS-305 form. All ECs should have copies of these
forms available for use at all times. It is also suggested that they be stored
on a thumb-drive for future use or need.
SPECIFIC MESSAGE
TRAFFIC INFORMATION
Each DEC shall make up a packet of at least five (5)
messages pertaining to event related to district level needs. Each EC shall
make up a packet of at least five (5) messages pertaining to event related
activities that will be sent to OEM and adjacent counties for information. Both
the DEC and EC requirements will be in addition to the message requirements
listed in the Attachments D-1 to D-3.
Each DEC shall compile all message traffic and keep records
of sent and received message traffic from all modes. This means that the DEC
will have to be cc’d on all message traffic.
All the counties shall circulate all their message traffic
and other tasks among themselves only on VHF simplex, or VHF Airmail peer to
peer, or HF SSB or HF Pactor.
Message traffic shall be sent by whatever means available
due to propagation, band, and mode conditions. Please keep in mind that the
primary emphasis will be by utilizing WinLink and Airmail while keeping in mind
the limitations of amateur radio equipment or normal infrastructure services as
listed in this operational order.
The OEM ARU shall respond
to all received message traffic before they secure from the S.E.T. This will
allow the sending station to confirm their message traffic did in fact reach
OEM and that they are capable of receiving message traffic from OEM.
MODES OF OPERATION
The below listed amateur radio modes of operation shall be
utilized in conjunction with proper operating procedures and FCC rules &
regulations. Other modes can be used at the discretion of the EC:
UHF/VHF
simplex – primary voice capable radio usage for command & control
HF
voice – good mode for contact between counties and districts within the
state using NVIS capable antennas
Packet
– solid means of communication for passing lists of information and
point-to-point contact
WinLink
– HF/VHF capable system for message handling
Airmail
– familiar email type message capability and capable system for message handling
Other modes to consider and try out for more training,
equipment experience, and actual fun will be:
Slow
Scan TV – great & easy means to show an actual site, damage, or other
need pieces of information
CW –
tried and true means of communications when band conditions are at their
worst even though it is not currently recommended for OR ARES use. (Know
that there still are people that do CW quite well)
APRS –
excellent tracking capability, static position plotting, and a good
command & control tool
D-STAR
– another good mode of operation to get large documents, attachments, and
other files through
KEY
COMMENT: Utilize any mode that is suitable for this event so long
as the message and the urgency of the message are considered.
GPS USAGE
For this S.E.T. all GPS
coordinates will be in UTM format with a datum of NAD-27. This is the standard
datum used for all OR search & rescue operation and it will be good
practice for us. However, any county can use Lat/Long, NAD-27, if that is the
county policy for this event. Make sure you have a cheater card or your GPS
manual with you when operating your GPS. When you give coordinates it should be
the main entrance to a building. If it is a linear object such as a field,
bridges, or another area object, use either the north or east side for GPS
coordinates.
Addition:
ARES personnel
can use any GPS coordinate datum necessary to get the information across to the
intended user. This shouldn't be a major issue since all it takes is a push of
a button on the GPS unit or computer to change over from one datum system to
another.
Please make sure that when you are out checking coordinates,
using your GPS, or trying to get a location fix use extreme caution, park clear
of any roadway, and remember safety around adverse terrain.
ANTENNA USAGE
You will have better reception, area coverage, and message
handling capability if you use the same types of antenna system between
connecting stations. This is most important when using NVIS type antennas. It
shall be the main focal point for this exercise since a properly positioned
NVIS antenna will give the best statewide coverage and increase our capability
to pass message traffic, have positive command and control, and allow us to
work within our districts as well as other districts within the state.
FREQUENCY USAGE
In order to make things simpler, the following frequencies
will be used during this S.E.T. This will allow acall
frequency that will enable units to know where to find other units, to make
initial contact, and move off to another frequency to conduct their business.
All counties are encouraged to monitor these call
frequencies on the hour and half hour in order for people to know when and
where to find another station/county band conditions permitting.
UHF/VHF
Frequencies
440 -
(? MHZ) internal county use per county communications plan or SOP
2m –
(? MHz) internal county use per county communications plan or SOP
6m –
(50.125 MHz) ground wave effect could prove to be useful for short range
communications and is worth trying
HF Frequencies
10m -
(28.375 MHz) ground wave effect could proved to be useful for short range
communications and is worth trying
15m -
(21.300 MHz)SSTV – (21.340 MHZ)
20m -
(14.275 MHz)SSTV – (14.233 MHZ)
40m -
(7.200 MHz)SSTV – (7.171 MHZ)
60m -
(5.346.5 MHz)Power
Restrictions: 50w ERP
80m -
(3.964 MHz)SSTV – (3.845 MHZ)
160m -
(1.978 MHz)SSTV – (1.845 MHZ)
Pactor frequencies tha
we will be using during the SET.
40m Pactor 1 & 2 -
7069.5
40m Pactor 3 - 7163.5
80m Pactor 3 - 3595.0
COMMAND &
CONTROL
The below listed requirements are for the DECs and ECs to
accomplish during the S.E.T. These tasks shall be completed as a major
component of this exercise in order to train, evaluate, and provide leadership
training at both levels.
SEC
shall or has:
Be
in overall control of the OR Section
Delegated
exercise authority to NB7O
Monitor
activities as appropriate for a good over view of Section activities
DECs
shall:
Monitor
all county activities within their district
Complete
all tasks listed in this operational order
Utilize
the chain of command to insure the ECs are properly briefed for this
exercise
Notify
the SEC of any safety issues
Notify
the SEC of any OADN equipment or served agency issues
Be
prepared to give direction or guidance to insure the counties perform
their tasks appropriately
Insure
that all counties within the district participate in the S.E.T.
Justify
to the SEC why any county within the district does not participate
ECs
shall:
Monitor
all county activities
Complete
all tasks listed in this operational order
Utilize
the chain of command within their county to insure good command &
control
Complete
the listed After Action Reports as listed in this document
Notify
the DEC of any safety issues
Notify
the DEC of any OADN equipment or served agency issues
Insure
that as many people as possible participate in the S.E.T.
Justify,
in writing, to the DEC why the county doesn’t participate
AFTER ACTION
REPORTS
Each EC shall complete the following reports by October 31st
2009 as indicated below.
ARRL
Public Service Activity Report to ARRL
S.E.T.
After Action Report (AAR) (attached)
S.E.T.
After Action Report (AAR) on a standard ICS-213 to be completed by each EC
that will list the following:
(3)
Positive aspects of the S.E.T.
(3)
Negative aspects of the S.E.T. with solutions to correct the issue
Any
identified safety issues
Any identified
equipment issues
Ideas
to increase ARES operational capabilities
A
brief status report on the ARES and county Emergency Manager’s Office
relationship
A
brief description of how the ARES personnel felt about the S.E.T.
A
report of total man-hours worked by each county ARES unit (# of hrs
worked X # of personnel = man-hours)
CROSS-DISTRICT
CONTACT INFORMATION
Each OR Section District shall attempt to contact an
adjacent District as indicated in the table below. Each District can contact
additional Districts if possible. Remember this is a good opportunity to check
propagation, NVIS capabilities from various locations, and allow for training
experience in S.E.T.ting up antennas and plotting contacts and propagation.
Each District shall contact at least two of the listed three Districts in the
below table.