[HamWAN PSDR] [Netops] Oregon and Washington HamWAN
Scott J. Burrows
sburrows97211 at comcast.net
Tue Oct 30 12:01:50 PDT 2018
Nigel,
Thanks for the reply. The Oregon group (oregonhamwan.com) will be meeting on
November 10th (9am-12) to discuss organizing efforts. Additionally, identify
possible sector locations in Portland, OR and possibly Vancouver, WA. The
interest in this area is huge with many people waiting for action. I have
learned this past month, local radio clubs had purchased equipment in CY2014 to
deploy when the Larch Mountain connection was completed.
I attend the Clark County Amateur Radio Club (CCARC) digital group meetings in
Vancouver, WA. They are discussing pilot projects, funding, and other aspects
for the State of Washington. The idea is to have a Northern and Southern route
in Washington for the emergency communications.
I understand your concerns about limited resources and staffing to help in
these efforts. However, I would like to offer a solution to the problem. If
PSDR could work with a small group of technical and strategic members of the
PDX/Vancouver team, we could help each other. In the military we called it
"Train the Trainers". We could help create procedures, documentation, and
other artifacts that helps everyone involved.
I hope your group will see the benefit of working together with others to
deploy workable solutions for emergency communications. We hams are very
talented and have time to help. Please discuss this topic at your next board
meeting. Thanks
Scott, N7DOD
----- Original Message -----
From: Nigel Vander Houwen <nigel at nigelvh.com>
To: Scott J. Burrows <sburrows97211 at comcast.net>
Cc: Hamwan Network Ops Operations <netops at hamwan.org>, PSDR <PSDR at hamwan.org>,
Tom Hayward <tom at tomh.us>
Sent: 10/29/2018 8:31:15 PM
Subject: Re: [Netops] Oregon and Washington HamWAN
Scott,
To start, thank you for the feedback. I’ll see if I can form some responses to
your notes below. Please note that for now these are my opinions and
perspectives. I am on the board, and I am a long time network admin for the
Puget Sound network, but much of this covers topics that haven’t really been
formalized.
With regards to Oregon+Washington, the Puget Sound team is stretched thin.
We’ve got a number of new sites and growth opportunities in our region, and
we’re having to pretty severely prioritize work based on very limited crew
availability, particularly climbers. I don’t think we’re in a good position to
“take charge” of getting Oregon deployed too. We’re more than happy to
coordinate work for RF links, and provide as much technical support as we can,
but I’m going to venture to say that local folks are going to need to get the
boots on the ground work done.
Along these lines, HamWAN as an organization has always been set up that it
*shouldn’t* be reliant on us. HamWAN is a standard that anyone can go and
build. You noted some of these sister networks before. Tampa, Memphis, (2x) BC,
Spokane, are all set up by other folks who were interested. Depending on the
situation, they have coordinated with us more or less. “HamWAN Oregon” would be
the same, if we can link via RF, that’s fantastic, but that isn’t a requirement
for getting a local instance going down there.
With regards to documentation, you are correct, it is lacking, and it’s a known
issue. We’ve had some folks volunteer to help, but you are also more than
welcome to help too. We’ve recently improved some of the tooling to make
editing the documentation easier (thanks Tom). If you are, please let us know.
Aligned with both the “sister networks” and “documentation” topics, HamWAN.org
isn’t always the clearest as to what represents the “standard” that applies to
everyone, and what is just of interest/specific to the Puget Sound network,
since it started here, and Puget Sound is the flagship. Again, it’s been a
known shortfall, waiting for some improvement.
As chairman of the board, I often encourage representatives from our sister
networks to run for the board as our yearly elections come around. Sometimes we
get some, and sometimes we don’t. People everywhere are busy, and most of the
folks running these networks aren’t retired and have their regular jobs,
families, and other drains on their time in addition to the hobby of HamWAN. I
look forward to getting a representative from the Oregon sister network in the
not too distant future.
So, the short answer here, and again this is my opinion, is that HamWAN is
structured so that local teams can build their own, and the common standard
allows for clients to move from place to place, and interoperation to be easy.
Oregon will need a local team to head the operations down there, and the Puget
Sound folks will be pleased to work with them to help get things off the ground.
Thanks,
Nigel
On Oct 29, 2018, at 18:31, Scott J. Burrows <sburrows97211 at comcast.net> wrote:
Hello,
I'm curious, do the PSDR folks in Seattle have a plan for integrating both Oregon and Washington into their existing HamWAN network? I have talked to folks within Washington State about their costing estimates and deployment strategies of their HamWAN initiative. The proposed effort discussed deploying HamWAN technology both for the Northern and Southern routes of the state. Earlier this month, the Clark County ARES/RACES group submitted a "2019 Grant Request Proposal" to the Clark Regional Emergency Service Agency to build out a prototype client station at the county EOC. Also, the folks in Oregon have secured a large grant (possibly $30,000 dollar) for HamWAN and will be discussing HamWAN deployments this year. They are organizing teams for fund raising, network administration, site installation, mentorship, and strategic planning.
Much of the talk in the IRC group has been about technical suggestions for minor technical problems. I have not encountered any serious discussions about large implementation efforts in expanding the HamWAN network, although perhaps that is occurring via another method. The Memphis, Tampa Bay, and British Columbia seem to be small regional implementations in distant states/provinces. However, I have not seen any serious discussions about statewide strategic and tactical implementations of HamWAN (i.e. Washington and Oregon).
In my experience, technology folks get fixated on the nuts-and-bolts of the network technology and forget about strategic leadership, management, and formal documentation. Much of the PSDR website has not been updated in years. I regularly hear comments at digital meetings where folks are interested in HamWAN, but are waiting for more specific information. This makes large scale deployments extremely difficult if you have to email the HamWAN Network Operations folks every day, assuming they have time to respond.
I understand that the HamWAN folks in Seattle are busy with day jobs and unable to respond immediately to all questions. However, if the PSDR leadership team was to reach out to the larger audience, I am sure they will find many talented folks to help with most aspect of HamWAN.
Hopefully this message will not be considered slamming the HamWAN folks in Seattle. Please don't
shoot the messenger. The technical folks (Tom Hayward and Nigel Vander Houwen)
have been extremely responsive and helpful. I respect the vision and work that
PSDR volunteers have done to date. If you talk to your customer base, you
might be surprised the help you may get.
Thanks
Scott, N7DOD
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