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#61
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Digital wrote:
"Cmdr Buzz Corey" wrote in message Years ago I participated in ham radio communications after a tornado cleaned out about half of the southern part of Witchta Fall, Tx. The kind folks of WF housed us in a church, provided sleeping facilities and fed us. Anyone think that was violating the rule of "pecuniary interest"? ................ Of course not. Besides, who but the most idiotic of Hams would accuse you of same? Bingo! |
#62
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John Smith wrote:
CB: Funny, but when the gov't asked for billions for "homeland defense" and made fema and it united, I thought they would have bought some communications equip., trained people and they would be set in place in such a disaster--from planes, tops of tall buildings, in communication vehicles and such--then begin communicating with hams in their local communities to handle communications for family and other services into that area. I never thought for a moment they would then plan, in a real disaster, to start hiring hams--that simply sucks and demonstrates we have been screwed. So just were are they "hiring" hams? |
#63
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All that money to the ARRL which everyone knows to be the only legit
representative of ALL of the nations hams and not one single penny to the looser up in Maine who is usually bellowing how important he is. The Corporation for National and Community know which groups are real and which are phony and they know that the ARRL and ONLY the ARRL deserves the support because the ARRL is REAL and is saving lives. The K1MAN group is nothing more than a guy in an old packing crate in Maine. Service N9OGL wrote: NEWINGTON, CT, Sep 2, 2005--The Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS) will provide a $100,000 grant supplement to ARRL to support Amateur Radio's emergency communication operators in states affected by Hurricane Katrina. The grant will help to fund "Ham Aid," a new League program to support Amateur Radio volunteers deployed in the field in disaster-stricken areas. ARRL Chief Development Officer Mary Hobart, K1MMH, expressed gratitude to CNCS for its generous response. Ham Aid, she said, offers a unique opportunity to support individual radio amateurs helping to bridge the communication gap Hurricane Katrina has caused. "For the first time in ARRL history, we will be able to reimburse some of the expenses that hams incur in response to a disaster," she said. "We only wish that we could justify an expense reimbursement program like this every time Amateur Radio Emergency Service volunteers are called upon to help in a disaster or emergency, sometimes placing themselves in harm's way." In addition to providing emergency communication within and outside the affected areas, Amateur Radio Emergency Service (ARES) members and individual radio amateurs are supplementing the communication needs of emergency management and relief agencies, including the American Red Cross and The Salvation Army. Hobart said it's only due to the scope of the unprecedented and tragic Katrina disaster that CNCS agreed to help support dedicated Amateur Radio volunteers. "But," she added, "we'd like to think of this grant as a token of appreciation and a recognition of Amateur Radio's value in past emergencies and disasters, such as 9/11." Hobart says ARRL's Ham Aid program already has received some substantial private donations. Those and the CNCS grant, she said, provide a way for the League to "support our Field Organization as never before." The CNCS Ham Aid grant is effective for operations established and documented as of September 1, 2005, and the aid is earmarked for Hurricane Katrina deployments only at this point. Guidelines are being established that will permit volunteers who have been involved in bona fide field support operations on or after September 1 to provide communication support to apply for a reimbursement voucher on a per diem basis. Trained Amateur Radio operators will be on site for the duration of this disaster response, which could run into several weeks or months. "Many will leave their jobs and families and travel on their own expense, using their own equipment," Hobart points out. Corporation funds may also sustain the Ham Aid program and help to rebuild the emergency communications capabilities in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama to ensure that the Gulf Coast is prepared, should disaster strike again. The CNCS grant is an extension of ARRL's three year Homeland Security training grant, which has provided certification in emergency communication protocols to nearly 5500 Amateur Radio volunteer over the past three years. "CNCS grants helped make it possible for the ARRL to train America's hams and make them the best all-volunteer emergency radio service ever seen," Hobart said. "Now they are making it possible for the hams to use that training." |
#64
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![]() Randy wrote: "N9OGL" wrote in message oups.com... Food, caps, tee-shirts, food, and bottle water is one thing, but money is another. My point in all of this is K1MAN was fined by the FCC for Pecuniary Interest and now the ASSHOLE RADIO RELAY LEAGUE is going to do the samething. What go for one person should apply for all. The MAIN problem I see here is the definition of the term noncommercial, and seems that there is two tems on what noncommercial means. Todd N9OGL .................................................. .. Learn to write (and spell), Todd. Most third graders can do better than you. Make the ARRL stop, make them all stop. Who listens to W1AW anyway, except for field day points. |
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K1MAN The crap has hit the fan. | Policy | |||
Here's Your Answer, Todd.... | Policy | |||
Pecuniary Interest | Policy |