Subj : Amateur Radio Operators Provide Post-Hurricane Communications in Mexico
To   : QST
From : ARRL de WD1CKS
Date : Fri Nov 03 2023 04:41 pm

11/03/2023

Radio Amateurs are providing communication services to and from the affected
areas in and around Acapulco, Mexico.

On the morning of Wednesday, October 25, 165 mile-per-hour winds from Hurricane
Otis knocked out all communications and unleashed a nightmare scenario in
Acapulco. �

The area is home to roughly 800,000 people. �

Radio Club Queretaro member Ruben Navarrete Galvan, XE1EC, told ARRL News that
amateur radio operators are still active with multiple operations, and they are
receiving citizen requests to obtain information on the whereabouts of their
relatives. �

"We keep an online database with these requests that we share with the
different hams participating in the operation. Read-only access to this
database is provided to the authorities who might need it, too. We also
transmit this information to hams deployed in the Acapulco area via HF," Galvan
said. �

Additionally, hams in the Acapulco area are trying to locate civilians using
their own resources. Some of these hams are operating their equipment on
battery power, while others have access to generators. Accessing many areas in
the region has been a challenge due to the amount of debris blocking travel.� �

Amateur radio operators have also been receiving requests from Acapulco
residents to call their relatives and let them know they are fine. Those
requests are transmitted via HF to the Emergency Net Operator, and then the
call is made to the family members. �

Galvan also reported that hams have been providing communication between state
agencies and their field personnel deployed in the Acapulco area. "At least
three state agencies have hams on their teams. This is the case for the state
of Durango, Morelos, and Santiago de Quer��taro. We have been communicating
their messages to their central coordination via HF relays. Requests for
specific requirements have been escalated to the support teams. Air medical
services have been directed to areas that were not being attended," he said.
Hams are also helping in other areas, including: �

Repairing a damaged repeater on Altzomoni at the Izta-Popo Zoquiapan National
Park to support communication efforts in certain areas of Guerrero Deploying
donations from a ham in Arizona, including a UHF repeater, solar panels, and 50
handhelds, to the affected areas. Getting the state agency's mobile stations
back on the air and reinstalling the HF antennas that were damaged Emergency
Communications Coordinator International Amateur Radio Union Region 2 Emergency
Communications Coordinator Carlos Alberto Santamar�-a Gonz��lez, CO2JC, said
frequency protection has been requested for the following bands and
frequencies:

80-meter band: 3690 kHz 40-meter band: 7060 and 7095 kHz 20-meter band: 14.120
kHz

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