EIGHT STEP COMMUNICATION PLAN

Steps one through three and five through eight apply to everyone who has access to an Family Radio Service (FRS) radio. It is particularly important that you try to get the youngsters and the elderly involved! They are usually free to do communications duty while others are busy.

Steps 5 through 7 only apply to those licensed to operate ham radios. Everyone is encouraged to get ham licenses. It is inexpensive and only requires a relatively easy multiple-choice test. The Moraga Orinda Fire Corps offers frequent free classes to help you prepare for the test.

Step One: Family Safety & Security

Your first responsibility is to look to your own safety and the safety of your family, pets, and property. Take whatever action and time you need to guarantee that you are safe and secure and that your family is taken care of.

If there is any question, shut off electricity, water and gas. They are easy enough to turn back on. Likewise, if there's any question about the structural integrity of your home or place of work, evacuate and seek shelter with neighbors or in other structures in which you have more confidence.

Step Two: Turn on your FRS Radio

  • Find your FRS radio(s).
  • Put fresh batteries in the FRS radio(s)

    Alkaline batteries are preferred ... freshly recharged reusable batteries are OK for now. Please have a supply of new alkalines around for the long haul.

    If you are going to use rechargeable batteries, plug in and set up your recharger if you still have power or set up a solar recharger immediately in some safe sunlit place and get the next set of batteries charging.

  • Turn the radio on and set it to either Channel 9 (the Moraga Orinda calling frequency) or to your neighborhood frequency if one has been established.
    Make sure the tone/color is off or zero (see the cheat sheet for your radio).
  • Turn the volume up about 1/2 way and listen. Listening is the most important skill when using any kind of radio.

Step Three: Get On the FRS Radio

  • LISTEN carefully for at least 30 seconds which is a really long time. You may hear someone else on the radio already. If so, wait until they ask who else is out there then check in and get involved.
  • It's best to have a paper and pen/pencil handy to take notes. It can be really helpful to keep a log of who you heard and anything interesting they said.
  • If you haven't heard anybody else after 30 seconds, press the Push To Talk button (the top one on the LEFT side of the radio) and say your name and address then let go of the button to listen again.
  • It's generally best to identify yourself on the radio by your address as you may hand the radio to someone else in the family while you do some chore or another and if they're calling you by name it will just confuse the process.
  • FRS radio works best if we use it carefully and with discipline. If you don't hear someone taking charge of the chatter, you should try to become the communications leader (FRS Net Control) for your neighborhood.
    • Ask people to identify themselves and make a list.
    • Try to convince folks to wait turns to talk and to respond when called.
    • Find out who has things to say and call on them.
    • Take notes (keep a log of who you've heard and interesting things said).
    • Make sure people know you heard them and understand what they told you by repeating their information back for them to confirm.
    • Stay as calm as you can. They are reassured by your tone and radio demeanor.
    • If there are folks who are feeling panicy, find someone who can go and help. Often all it takes is someone else to talk to or who can do some simple thing(s) to address the panic.
  • Stay in control until someone you think is better at it comes along. Stay in control until you start feeling fatigued or rattled then find someone else to take over!
  • If you are in control of the FRS net, you may get information you want to pass along to police, fire, medical folks, whatever. First, make sure those messages are nice and clear in your notes/log and that you're ready to pass them off to someone who is going to carry them the next step of the way (hopefully a ham in Steps four and up but maybe someone who's going to have to run them somewhere).

This is all you can do if you are a member of the neighborhood team and do not have an amateur radio license and/or equipment. This is really valuable stuff! It is enough to do this well. Often you will have no pressing need to get messages out of the neighborhood but the communications among the neighbors reassures everyone that all is as good as it is going to be.

Step Four: Turn on Ham Radios

This step assumes:

  1. You have an amateur radio (ham) license and
  2. You have a working ham radio, and
  3. You have an FRS radio.

You want to make sure you have pencil and paper and, hopefully, a clock to tell you the time for your log if you need to keep one.

 

  • Plug your radio in if there is still power on, or
    Plug your radio into an external battery, or
    Get the battery-adapter for your radio and the batteries you bought for emergency power so you're ready when your radio's batteries run out.
  • Turn on the radio and tune in to your City Simplex frequency.
  • If you're having trouble communicating on the appropriate Simplex frequency, tune to the Baynet East Bay Hills Repeater (frequency is 443.975 with a positive offset and a subaudible tone of 100.0), our backup facility that we share with Bay Area Red Cross.
    These frequencies should be programmed into your radio already!
  • Listen to the repeater for at least 30 seconds before transmitting.
  • If you do not hear others on the frequency, announce yourself: "This is [call-sign] in [City/Town]." You are now the city net control operator (net control)! Say, "[call-sign], [first name], is activating the Moraga / Orinda / Canyon/ Emergency Net. Other users will please stand by and check in when requested. First, is there any emergency traffic?"
  • The first person on Baynet East Bay Hills should do the same as the Lamorinda Emergency Resource Net.

The City Nets will establish communications with civil and Fire District command staffs as quickly as possible. The Regional Net will relay messages from operators unable to reach appropriate City nets and coordinate traffic among the various EOCs. The City Net will query you about your neighborhood if nobody else from the neighborhood has checked in. If your neighborhood group can't reach the EOC, the Regional Resource Net will pass traffic to your City net on request.

These communications are bi-directional. The City Nets want to know how your neighborhood is doing (and what it is doing to take care of itself) at a high level. The Cities want to know what real and pressing problems your neighborhood team is facing so it can adequately prioritize scarce resources. Just as important, the combined situational information from all the neighborhoods needs to be reflected back so that neighborhoods can be confident they have an accurate and adequate picture of the situation in the region.

informed authorities and neighborhoods share a foundation for well coordinated and properly managed action at all levels.

Step Five: Do Into Damage Assessment Mode

Your neighborhood team leader (IC) should have a plan for damage assessment and an action plan for hazard mitigation and initial problem response. The FRS network control for a neighborhood maintains the situation data log as data comes in and updates the team leadership on a regular basis.

As damage reports are logged, priority or emergency messages are passed from the FRS operators through the net to embedded hams who report them either to the Regional or their assigned Area nets.

Step Six: Handle Messages from Anyone to Anyone

All messages of every priority will be accepted and passed to reachable destinations. FRS operators will be able to query hams for the known status of messages so that they have confidence that messages aren't being lost or ignored. Messages will be handled in relative order of priority (Emergency, Priority, Normal, and Welfare).

Messages receipts will be returned to the neighborhoods as messages are delivered to destination EOCs, Fire or Police Dispatch Centers, school communicators, or shelter communicators. Replies will be logged as they come back to the neighborhoods and delivery receipts returned to Repliers. [Message management protocol in an appendix]

Step Seven: Orderly Check-in and Check-out

Once connected to a network (one or several), do not merely turn radios off. Inform the network control operator that you are going off the air (and preferably why and for how long). If you are switching frequencies to momentarily check in to another net, check out of the net(s) you are leaving. If you are swamped with message traffic on a net and are also checked in to another net, take the time to check out of the second net so they don't think you are available.

Step Eight: Demobilization

Maintain your formal and informal logs. Scratch-paper and informal notes can be tossed but the station logs and message copies you handled should be retained.

Get permission to demobilize. You may have been issued equipment you need to return or account for. You may need to be debriefed by collaborators before you forget important operational information. Demobilization is an important process. Do your best to make sure you help the team remember what it should and prepare to be better in future situations.

NETWORK OPERATIONS

In either FRS, Regional, or Area networks, stations should initially check in and identify with official FCC call signs (hams) or first-names and street addresses (FRS). Nets should develop and adopt consistently used tactical call signs for significant operational role players. Role players include the currently active communications person in each neighborhood, assigned to each EOC, assigned to a Fire Station, at a School, and at a Shelter. Role players also include the Net Control operators for the Regional and any active Area networks. Role players also include the Net Control operators for the Regional and any active Area networks. Such role players should be addressed on the air by their tactical call sign. Ham role players should identify by official call sign in accordance with FCC requirements.

All networks in this system are self activated. The first operator onto the frequency is expected to establish a net and maintain orderly communications. The network control operator (Net Control) is responsible for maintaining an accurate roster of stations in the network and stations previously connected but temporarily off-line. The roster should include basic status about the well-being of the stations in the list as well as a current indication of a station's indication that it has traffic that has yet to be handled.

Network control logs should use the format of the ICS-214a where each page has the date and time, a page number, the name and/or call sign of the control operator. The columns are timestamp and communications summary. The timestamp is the time a message was sent or received. The originator should be noted in the communications summary column. The originator is either Net Control (NC) or a tactical call. The communications summary is as simple as a one-liner (checked in, checked out, no traffic) or captures the text of an important message. It may also be a receipt for delivery of a message or the reply sent in response to a query. The logs of a neighborhood Net Control acting as ham link-operator and the Net Control of the Resource or Area networks should match up.

Message prioritization is critical. Stations must respect the priority of messages from served agencies as well as that coming from neighborhoods. Networks should be particularly careful to leave ample opportunity for stations to break into the operation of the net for priority or emergency traffic.

It is essential that neighborhoods act to settle communications down and maintain order. It is important that people communicate calmly and professionally no matter how dire the immediate situation. It does not help to shout, scream, or plead. What's needed is direct and clear information as well expressed as possible. The team may need to dispatch real people to calm those who are most needy and to give them face time to talk out their emotions. It is important to do that off-line so that others in the community are not overly influenced by individual moments of panic or pain.

FRS NETWORK SCRIPTS

In the following scripts, we use [NAME] and [ADDRESS] where you should insert your name and street address. We also use [NEIGHBORHOOD] and [NET] and you insert your neighborhood or net name. You don't have call signs for FRS so you need some clear identifier. We suggest [ADDRESS] as the primary tactical call sign for your family and [NAME] to direct a call to a person when appropriate.

When doing a drill, practicing networking on the FRS radios, you must say, "This is a drill." frequently! MUST!

FRS Net Script

"Hello, Hello, Hello! This is [NAME] at [ADDRESS]. I am establishing an emergency FRS net for [NEIGHBORHOOD]. Other stations are asked to stand by or switch to another channel while this net is in progress. Are there any emergency messages for the net at this time?"

Pause. Handle emergency messages as needed.

"This is a directed net. I will first call the roll and take check-ins. Please respond with your address, first name, and whether you have messages for the net. Later I will ask for new check-ins and check-outs on a regular basis. At any time, if you have an emergency message, announce it by saying BREAK-BREAK. Announce priority traffic by saying BREAK."

Pause. Call the roll as you have it. For each person checking in, record [ADDRESS], [NAME], and any significant comments they make.

After you have called the roll, ask, "Are there any others to check in at this time?"

Pause. Handle check ins/outs and messages as needed.

"Anybody with a message, please call Net Control. Stations should not call each other directly. If you have a message for another person, ask Net Control for permission to proceed."

At this point, the net should flow freely with messages flowing through Net Control. Net control should grant permission for direct contacts unless there is some priority or emergency activity for which the channel is being kept open.

Once you have the net organized, you should run through the roster of stations checked in about every fifteen minutes. As you start down the roster, you should preface it with:

"This is Net Control for the [NEIGHBORHOOD] FRS Net. I am going to call the roll. Please respond with your first name and address."

HAM NETWORK SCRIPTS

TBD