Posted on 02/14/2006 6:08:06 PM PST by Professional Engineer
It was the fourth night after Hurricane Katrina, and something like a thousand patients, doctors and staff were trapped at Medical Center Louisiana in downtown New Orleans, surrounded by floodwaters. Outside, reports were grim. People were drowning in their attics. Inside the hospital, there was no running water, no power, no phones and no Internet. Cell phones didnt work. Each day the authorities said evacuations were about to begin, but nothing happened.
The staff thought theyd seen everything the disaster could bring. Then, in the middle of the night, a pregnant woman dragged herself out of the foul, dark water surrounding the centers Charity Hospital, having managed to swim several blocks from her home, where she had been trapped. She was in labor and the pain was intensifying. By flashlight, doctors quickly determined that she needed a Caesarean section. But with no running water, no electricity, and no way to clean her up or to sterilize instruments, surgery was out of the question. The doctors conferred, and then sent Tim Butcher, at that time Charitys emergency operations director, upstairs to a conference room where a 5-foot-3-inch, middle-aged jazz musician, known for his cigarette-rasped voice and salty language, was sleeping on an air mattress. Richard, wake up, Butcher said. We need you.
Richard Webb, who happens to be legally blind, is one of the nations more than 660,000 licensed amateur radio operators. (Theyre nicknamed hams for reasons that are unclear.) As an amateur radio operator and a member of the Mobile Maritime Network, Webb regularly relays messages from small boats, occasionally participates in small-vessel rescue operations and helps with tracking hurricanes.
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When the phone lines are down and wireless takes on a whole new meaning, when cell phone and PDA networks fail and batteries go dead, when the lights go out, authorities fall back on this seemingly antiquated but always reliable form of communication. Amateur radio becomes quite literally a lifeline.
Most communications systems are all going through some common chokepoint, says Allen Pitts, media and public relations manager of the American Radio Relay League. Whether its a telephone switchboard, an Internet relay or a radio tower, knock out that chokepoint, and the whole system fails, he says.
Rather than relying on a network, each ham operator has a complete, self-contained transmitting and receiving station. There is no chokepoint, says Pitts. They are like ants at a picnic. You can knock out some, many or even most of them, and they still get to the food. Each one is a mobile, independent unit working in cooperation for a common goal.
Understandably, many government agencies and hospitals have enlisted amateur radio operators to be on call for emergencies. When the two hospitals making up New Orleans Medical CenterUniversity and Charity hospitalsdecided to set up their station two years ago, they looked around for volunteers to run it. Richard Webb and his wife, Kathleen Anderson, who is also a ham, raised their hands. They set up the station and tested it every week or so.
The night before Katrina hit, Webb pushed Andersonshe uses a wheelchairto their van and she drove them to the hospital from their small home in suburban Slidell, Louisiana. Pretty much every other vehicle they encountered during that 30-mile trip was heading out of, not into, downtown New Orleans. At the hospital, this unlikely A-Teama blind man and a woman in a wheelchairset up their antennas and gasoline-fired generators, got on the air, tracked the approaching storm and rode it out.
Like much of New Orleans, the hospital suffered relatively little damage from Katrina directly. Then the levees broke. Soon the hospital was isolated, an island surrounded by water 10 feet deep in places. (And, yes, when the power went out, a hospital staffer did offer Webb a flashlight. Thanks, he said, but I dont need it.)
Webb and Anderson kept communications going 20 hours a day, relaying messages to and from the state command center in Baton Rouge. They passed along the hospital staffs requests for food, drinkable water, medicine, bedding, cleaning supplies and more. Authorities repeatedly told Webb that rescuers were coming to evacuate the hospitallater that day, in a few hours, the next daybut day after day, nobody showed up. Coast Guard boats delivered supplies, and took out a handful of patients who needed critical care, including babies in incubators.
Webb and Anderson listened in on the emergency networks and heard how other hams, including many who drove in from all over the country, were a vital part of numerous rescues. In hundreds of cases, people trapped by floodwaters in homes or on rooftops tried calling 911 on their cell phones. The calls wouldnt go through. So they called relatives in other parts of the country, sometimes a
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Hamming It Up |
A word about all this relaying. While most of todays sophisticated communications equipment uses horizon-to- horizon, line-of-sight radio frequencies, ham radio must rely on lower frequencies for long-distance transmission. Low-frequency waves do an interesting thing, says Pitts. They ricochet. These waves bounce off the ionosphere, 60 miles over your head. Depending on atmospheric conditions, some days you can communicate more clearly with another ham operator in Kenya than with your buddy across town. By using different frequencies, directions and means, ham operators learn the art form of getting them to bounce where they want them to go, Pitts says.
Webb took one call from a teenager who had a brand-new license with no kind of emergency training. He was in a school building with a number of other people, and nobody knew they were there. Two babies needed formula, and an elderly man needed a respirator. Webb relayed the call, and the group was rescued.
As the week wore onthe storm hit on a Monday nightmore and more people began stopping by Webbs radio room, the only link to the outside world. When he could, he sent out word from hospital staffers and patients to their families: Im at the hospital, Im OK, I hope to be evacuated soon, Ill call you when I can. Hams who received the messages in other parts of the country telephoned or e-mailed the families.
A number of people tried to pay Webb for sending out their messages. Sorry, cant take it, hed growl. Not allowed. Im strictly a volunteer.
Sometimes during lulls between radio transmissions he pulled out his guitar. Small crowds gathered, welcoming the diversion. Webb became a rare source of light and calm in the darkness and confusion of a disaster scene.
The night the woman in labor swam to the hospital, Tim Butcher shook Richard Webb awake and told him that she needed a helicopter. We have a two-hour window to get her out of here, Butcher said. Otherwise the mother would probably die, and the baby might, too. Webb ran to his radio, broke in on the network, and tried to relay a message to anyone.
On this evening, the first ham that Webb could reach was a fellow member of the Mobile Maritime Network in Texas. The Texas ham contacted a Network member in Clevelandwho was also an auxiliary Coast Guard officer. The Cleveland ham contacted his superior officers, and within a short time the patient was being airlifted to another hospital, where she had a C-section. At last report both mother and baby were doing well.
Webb saved one life that night, Butcher says, maybe two. And no one knows how many other people at the hospital might have died if Webb and his radio had not been there. Butchers sure of one thing: Richard is a real hero.
This deserves a huge BTTT.
Wow, I had no idea! Thank you for posting this. :-)
Please Freepmail me if you want to be added to or deleted from the list.
It's not a Katrina-style emergency, but...the amateur radio club I belonged to when I first got my ticket (Lynchburg ARC, Virginia, a FANTASTIC bunch) did a lot of work with local charity "a-thons"--bike-a-thons, walk-a-thons, the city Christmas Parade, stuff like that, probably 10-12 events a year. We had a good repeater system on 2m and 440 and put it to excellent use. On a lot of weekends I found myself standing around watching people do crazy things like ride a bike for 100 miles or run a 50-mile foot race through the Blue Ridge.
So one weekend we were helping the Heart Association or the Lung Association or some such group with a 50-mile charity bike ride. About 12 of us rolled in on Saturday morning to be told, "Oh, we don't need you. We have cellphones." Our net operator and the lead organizer had an argument (nobody had told the club that we weren't needed), and we wound up carrying the day and stationing our operators where they were assigned. I was at one of the mid-event rest stops.
Now, this was circa 1994, back when cellphones were a lot bigger and a LOT hungrier on power than they are now. Back then, of course, you couldn't run a cellphone all day like you can now. As the day wore on, the phones started, one by one, to go dead from constant use. And the 2m net traffic picked up. By 2/3 of the way through the event, every brick cellphone had crapped out and we were the sole communications for the event. I had this gigantic Quantum battery, the size of a big police HT, powering my tiny little Yaesu FT-415, a radio about 1/4 the size of the battery! So I had no trouble staying up and running the entire day.
The worst part of the day was when the net had to be used to coordinate an ambulance response. Some poor guy on the ride had a heart attack and fell over stone dead.
The next year, they made sure to contact the club early so that they could assure that about 15 hams were available.
In 1996 we had a freak downburst thunderstorm rip through Lynchburg with 80+ mph winds and knock out every communication tower the city had save one, and the phone lines that connected their 911 center to surrounding jurisdictions. We sent hams to the sheriffs' offices in two nearby counties and used a guy's backyard repeater to pass traffic between the various police and sheriffs' departments.
Yeah, the Internet has made ham radio "obsolete"...to a point. But when you need it, you NEED IT. I'm not a really active operator anymore, but my Advanced-class ticket is current through 2012 and I aim to renew it as long as I'm alive. Even though I really only drag my gear out on Field Day lately.
}:-)4
de KS4RY
<< Please Freepmail me if you want to be added to or deleted from the list. >>
Hook me up, please.
Thanks -- Brian
Done!
Add me too please!
I just realized that storm was in 1993, not 1996. Senility at 39 is a horrible thing. :)
}:-)4
You're on the list!
A did a whole bunch of 'a=thon' events when I was in Lubbock in the late 80's and early 90's.
The most fun I have with 2m anyway, is weather spotting. Nothing like tracking a high-precip supercell after dark by lightning flashes alone!
Too many folks don't. I'm glad you stopped by to read it.
Add me please.
You're on the list.
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