Subj : Arkansas Section News To : All From : Daryl Stout Date : Mon May 22 2023 09:30:40 Hello all: What a great time in Xenia at the Greene County Fairgrounds! The vendor area was full, and the flea market was jam-packed with everything you can imagine. Bargains galore. There were several food trucks and trailers, turning out several varieties of "fair food". I had one of the best corn dogs I've ever eaten, and that is a large endorsement! (Just FYI, they do not understand BBQ up there.) The forums were mostly standing room only! The Hamvention provides an opportunity to see equipment you didn't even know existed, talk to experts about almost any ham radio technology or topic, and touch that new radio. Make plans to go if you are able, and bring your friends. Speaking of the forums, I was able to attend the ARES forum to hear Josh Johnston, KE5MHV, speak. As you remember, Josh was the Emergency Manager for Johnson County (Clarkesville) for, I think, 17 years. Now he is the Emergency Management Director for the ARRL. The crowd was interested to hear what direction the ARRL would be taking and how they fit into the overall scheme of EMCOMMM. Josh made several excellent points: 1. The ARRL has signed a new MOU with FEMA for the next 5 years. 2. The ARRL has been elected as an association member of SAFECOMM. 3. There is no conflict between ARES and AUXCOMM. I'd like to expand on the last item, if you'll indulge me please. I wrote the following four paragraphs a while back and Josh said really close to the same thing. I think some of you believe the ARRL is a Response Organization with a duty to act. This is not correct. The ARRL is much better thought of as a Resource. There are go-kits, there is some training, there is advice, there are lists of potential volunteers at hand. There are no Type 1, 2, or 3 ARESMATs available to Newington. That in no way diminishes the League. They simply have a different purpose than what most of you are thinking. Local EM's need control of volunteers to satisfy the Stafford Act, which effectively ends the question about who works for who. Jeopardizing Relief Funds by not being NIMS-compliant is not an option anymore. AUXCOMM does not teach soldering, message handling, WinLink, radio programming, or any other of the many skills thought to be included in an Amateur Radio Operator. Rather it teaches the operators how to integrate into an already existing management structure and not make fools of themselves by trying to assume command. As you can plainly see, there is no one stop shop when it comes to EMCOMM, and it is not likely to change in the foreseeable future. Instead of having a contest on who can holler loudest about the virtues of one system over another, why don't we do training that satisfies whatever entity where you want to volunteer? Then you can be the best you can be. Fellow hams, won't you join me in working toward our common goal of helping our served agencies? Let me know how I can help and 73, J.M. Rowe N5XFW Arkansas ARRL SEC -------------------------------------------------------------------- ARRL Arkansas Section Section Manager: James D Ferguson Jr, N5LKE n5lke@arrl.org -------------------------------------------------------------------- --- SBBSecho 3.20-Win32 * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (954:895/7) .