Allen N5XZ
-------- Original message --------From: Skip Cameron <[email protected]> 
Date: 2/20/18  1:12 PM  (GMT-06:00) To: [email protected] Subject: [tdxs-list] 
URGENT Please send your comments to FCC R/E Puerto Rico Hurricane Maria 
suggestions 

DEADLINE FOR COMMENTS is TODAY FEB 21!
Below are my comments.ARRL is yet again commenting off-topic to push enacting 
FCC Rule 

FCC RM-11708 which most hams believe will harm our spectrum use.

Go here for information on how to file your own 
commenthttp://www.wireless-girl.com/PSHSB17344_howtoEZfile.html
Go here to file your comment. (KEY on the FCC site is to press ENTER after each 
entry)

https://www.fcc.gov/ecfs/search/filings?limit=25&offset=0&proceedings_name=17-344&sort=date_disseminated,DESC


I wrote my comments and saved it to a text file (pasted below) and then dragged 
the file to the block at the bottom of the FCC page.Fill in these 
fields:PROCEEDING: 

17-344

NAME of FILER: you name and call signTYPE OF FILING: click on COMMENTEMAIL: 
your emailADDRESS OF: FilerADDRESS:CITY:STATE:ZIPDRAG or DROP TEXT FILE or PDF 
LETTERCLICK EMAIL CONFORMATIONCLICK CONTINUE TO REVIEWLook for any errors in 
RED at top of screen and correct and pres enter after correction.When no errors 
review screen will have a button to SUBMIT 
Skip W5GAI
-------------------------------CommissionersFederal Communications 
Commission445 12 th Street SWWashington, DC 20554
SUBJECT Response to: PS Docket No. 17-344 Question C. 8
As a FCC licensed Amateur Radio Operator since 1954, I have participated in 
many disaster communications in response to earthquakes, tornadoes, hurricanes, 
wild fires, shipboard SOS responses, and stranded/injured/lost individuals or 
groups.
The Puerto Rico Hurricane Maria communications disaster highlights the inherent 
value of Amateur Radio operators in establishing immediate on site emergency 
communications and deploying additional members quickly, serving at no cost to 
any government body.
The FCC should seriously examine the limitations it places on Amateur Radio in 
disaster communications and allow us to transmit and receive all critical life 
saving communications.Please update your part 97 rules accordingly, as many in 
Amateur Radio have already suggested.
I found the comments by my own national organization, the ARRL, the National 
Association for Amateur Radio; and that of Steve Waterman, Winlink Radio Email 
System Administrator to be off topic and inappropriate and they should be 
largely ignored.
The most important rebuttal for you to heed to both ARRL and Waternan's off 
topic plea for you to act on their already commented upon RM-11708 is that the 
majority of ARRL's own members oppose it, and Waterman's intentions are for 
commercial gain in the Amateur spectrum with an encrypted, proprietary product 
that would harm the existing modes of operations Amateur Radio licensees use.
A more appropriate response to your request for comments is this one from a 
licensed Radio Amateur operator who was on the ground in Puerto Rico.It is on 
topic and worth heeding:
Response to: PS Docket No. 17-344 Question C. 8. ARC/ARRL Puerto Rico Hurricane 
Maria Deployment of Ham Radio Operator to Juncos Overview I was one of the 22 
amateur radio operators deployed to Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria. The 
comments and recommendations in this document are mine alone. The original 
mission of the ARRL/ARC mission was to pass ARC Safe & Well information to ARC 
HQ via HQ Winlink. Once on the island that mission was abandoned and amateur 
radio operators were deployed to assist in filling critical communications gaps 
where they were known to exit. I was deployed Puerto Rican Urban Search and 
Rescue HQ in Juncos PR a town of approx 40,000. The town was without power, 
cell coverage and the 800MHZ Police and Fire department communications system 
was not functioning. The Puerto Rican USAR team was completely without 
communications. I was able to provided coverage from Juncos into the FEMA EOC 
and the ARC HQ in San Juan using a 2M Yeasu FT-7800 radio and via the amateur 
radio 2M repeater KP4IA. I maintained this coverage for 15 days until cell 
coverage was restored to Juncos and portions of the PD/PD 800MHZ comm system 
was restored. Administrative traffic was passed to and from us via email using 
HF Winlink. Another effort was not so successful. During the day the majority 
of USAR members are deployed away from Juncos. Working with members of the 
Chicago Fire Department who were deployed to Puerto Rico attempts to provide 
reliable communications to the deployed teams using both VHF and UHF systems 
were made but due limited range of UHF, a lack of VHF radios in the USAR 
vehicles, the low power/battery life of hand held radios, the terrain and wide 
disbursement of the team members no reasonable, reliable system of 
communications to these teams was found. 
Comments/Recommendations: 
1. The simplicity, area covered and ease of setting up VHF communications make 
it a good means of initial disaster communications 2. Using communications 
systems manned by amateur radio operators should be an obvious solution when an 
area is struck by a disaster that eliminates all communications. Most of them 
are trained in setting up communications systems in difficult circumstances, 
running off car batteries and doing things like making antennas from pieces of 
wire etc. These 20 amateurs were an ad hoc group formed roughly 36 hours before 
deploying to Puerto Rico. 20 strangers came together with no real leadership 
present. Even so, in less than 2 days of arrival they organized themselves, 
redesigned the mission and deployed. There needs to be some kind of standing 
amateur radio teams ready to respond with an assigned leader. 3. A cache of 
portable VHF repeaters ready to deploy should be established. In the beginning 
only the KP4IA repeater was functioning covering about one third of the island. 
Over time other repeaters came on line.  4. There should also be a cache of 
Mag-mount 2M mobile radios. I was able to locate four PRC-7332 hand held 
transceivers at the SAR HQ. These were the only units capable of operation in 
the VHF band. They were low power and had a short battery life. Had there been 
more time it would have been fruitful to pursue obtaining VHF radios for the 
USAR vehicles. These would have had more power and better antennas therefore 
better coverage. 5. Users will not use systems that are complex to use or have 
unreliable coverage. This system had both. There was a lack of island wide 
communications. No one was sure what areas had repeater coverage and what did 
not. The various frequencies of the various repeaters was too confusing for SAR 
members. I don’t have a good answer for this one. We tried to develop a 
coverage map but ran out of time. With a little more time and training we may 
have been able to overcome some of these issues. 6. Due to its limited range, 
UHF is not an effective means of communications in an area like rural Puerto 
Rico. The Chicago Fire Department had with them a UHF repeater and we were able 
to locate another one. These were set up but due to the wide dispersal of the 
teams around the island, these repeater were never used. 7. Winlink was a very 
effective means of passing administrative traffic and complex messages in an 
area with no internet. The use of Pactor 4 for amateur radio was approved but 
since we had no Pactor modems it was not used 8. Local amateur radio operators 
are critical and vital resource in the time immediately after the disaster. We 
arrived one week after hurricane Maria. The local hams already had two 
excellent systems up and running that I was able to use: the KP4IA repeater and 
the “Montecillo Control” 2M relay system. 
I urge the FCC to listen to and work with on the ground disaster experienced 
Amateur Radio Operators by forming a brainstorming committee that is not 
beholden to the ARRL HQ or to Winlink Systems proprietary interests, and flesh 
out FCC Regulation Changes that enable a workable, deployable, simple-to-use, 
interoperable system of hardware and software to provide instant in- place 
disaster communications that serve the stricken communities without restriction 
or bureaucratic roadblocks.
Skip Cameron, W5GAI517 W Lakeshore DrCarriere, MS 39426





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