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Historic storm and floods hit Texas

Hur­ri­cane Har­vey began in the Caribbean, watched by the Emer­gency and Weath­er Net with radio ama­teurs acti­vat­ing 3.815 MHz, then it moved to the Gulf of Mex­i­co and inten­si­fied into a Cat­e­go­ry 4 storm to come ashore in Texas. 

The weath­er sys­tem arrived with dam­ag­ing winds in Texas, but also with heavy rain and the flood emer­gency con­tin­ues – it has been likened to Hur­ri­cane Kat­ri­na of August 2005 but some say the dis­as­ter is much worse. 

In prepa­ra­tion for land­fall in Texas the Hur­ri­cane Watch Net acti­vat­ed on 14.325 MHz and 7.268 MHz, where radio ama­teurs shared their on-the-spot observations. 

The res­cue and recov­ery work con­tin­ues in Texas with respond­ing author­i­ties hard at work lift­ing thou­sands of peo­ple to safety. 

ARRL South Texas Sec­tion Pub­lic Infor­ma­tion Offi­cer Mike Urich KA5CVH took to a news-talk radio sta­tion WGMD to describe the situation. 

He also took the time to explain how Ama­teur Radio is able to pro­vide a pub­lic ser­vice dur­ing emer­gen­cies and disasters. 

Spend­ing many hours in the Har­ris Coun­ty Emer­gency Oper­a­tions Cen­tre, he report­ed that local radio ama­teurs were able to help the res­cue and recov­ery work by spot­ting and report­ing prob­lems that require offi­cial attention. 

The Ama­teur Radio Emer­gency Ser­vice (ARES) found that there had been min­i­mal impact on com­mu­ni­ca­tions infra­struc­ture, although an Ama­teur Radio con­tin­gency was in place should there be a major com­mu­ni­ca­tions outage. 

South Texas ARES remained on stand­by as the response phase con­tin­ues and shel­ter­ing becomes a grow­ing need. Also involved was the radio ama­teurs attached to the Red Cross and the Sal­va­tion Army. 

It had been declared a state of dis­as­ter in 50 Texas coun­ties, some 271,000 were with­out pow­er, while the Red Cross shel­ters housed more than 3,000 people. 

There was also con­cern that Har­vey may cause more dam­age and weath­er sys­tems in the Gulf of Mex­i­co are being close­ly watched. 

– Jim Lin­ton VK3PC, Chair­man IARU Region 3 Dis­as­ter Com­mu­ni­ca­tions Committee

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