Tuesday, April 3, 2012

When all else fails, SATERN allows us to stay in touch with disaster ...

It is Saturday, Sept. 1, 2012.

Hurricane Nasty ? a category 3 hurricane ? has grown in the Gulf of Mexico like a malignant tumor and has made landfall near Pensacola, Fla. It has moved across the western panhandle of Florida. It is now moving across Alabama, destroying homes and businesses and disrupting lives, transportation routes, power and communications wherever it goes.

Cell phone and radio towers and telephone/power poles fall like harvested wheat. First responders either have no communications or only short-range communications within their communities. Except for the few agencies that have expensive satellite-based communications, telephone and internet services are non-existent. Because of the extent of the damage and the difficulty in opening up roads, the telephone, cell phone and internet providers report that it will be several days before any kind of reliable communications can be re-established.

It is this kind of scenario that the Salvation Army Team Emergency Radio Network trains for all year. SATERN is a group of Salvation Army Emergency Disaster Services volunteers with amateur radio licenses that specialize in providing emergency communications. SATERN operators are adept at quickly establishing emergency communications for The Salvation Army. Because SATERN operators have their own equipment, they have easy access to what they need. There is very little communications infrastructure involved, so SATERN operators can be back ?on-the-air? quickly. And SATERN operators train for these kinds of situations frequently. They participate in daily and weekly ?nets? (on-air gatherings of SATERN or other amateur radio operators); attend trainings at local amateur radio club meetings; and participate in annual exercises.

SATERN operators can provide short-range communications for The Salvation Army within their own local communities. Plus, they can provide longer-range communications between the local corps or service center and divisional headquarters. SATERN operators also enable Salvation Army command posts and disaster sites to interface via modern digital communications. Some of the digital communications can be provided through new amateur radio modes. SATERN operators can also be an important member of the teams that deploy the Southern Territory?s new satellite-based communications systems including a satellite/radio communications trailer and three smaller satellite technical packages.

However, for many families that have been affected by a major disaster, the most important service SATERN provides is ?Health and Welfare? messages. Health and Welfare messages allow individuals and families to tell family members outside of the disaster-affected community about their status after the storm. They can tell their families that everyone is O.K., where they are staying and how they can be reached when communications return. After Hurricane Katrina, SATERN delivered over 25,000 such messages throughout the United States.

Amateur radio operators who are interested in becoming members of SATERN should register as an EDS and SATERN volunteer through the national disaster website at http://disaster.salvationarmyusa.org. The registration will be automatically forwarded to the territorial SATERN coordinator who will see that they are registered with the territory, with their division and their local Salvation Army unit.

Bill Feist is the Salvation Army disaster services director for the Alabama-Louisiana-Mississipi Division.

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