Subj : Newsline Part 2 To : All From : Daryl Stout Date : Fri Oct 28 2016 10:54 am A PLAN TO TAKE SPACE WEATHER BY STORM DON/ANCHOR: Hams deal with space weather regularly -- but what about everyone else? Yes, there is a plan - or there will be one soon in the U.S. Here's Amateur Radio Newsline's Mike Askins, KE5CXP. MIKE: Federal agencies now have until April to devise a comprehensive plan to predict, detect, and deal with solar flares, and other so-called space weather disturbances that could mess with the nation's technology, everything from GPS systems to satellites to the power grid itself. President Barack Obama's Oct. 13 Executive Order directed Homeland Security, NASA, the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of the Interior, among other offices, to find ways to be alert to such occurrences, including geomagnetic storms. Obama ordered the agencies to find ways to protect, or quickly repair the infrastructure, consistent with the goal identified in the nation's 2015 National Space Weather Action Plan. The order outlines the implementation of the plan, as a coordinated effort among agencies. For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Mike Askins, KE5CXP. (NBC NEWS, WHITEHOUSE.GOV) ** PUMPKIN PATROL HELPS SQUASH HALLOWEEN MISCHIEF DON/ANCHOR: It's THAT season -- and as spooky as Halloween can get sometimes, hams in New York are partnering with State Troopers to make sure this late October holiday doesn't turn into a real horror show -- as we hear in this report from Newsline's Kent Peterson, KC0DGY. AL: It's called Pumpkin Patrol because a lot of times there's a lot of mischief around the 30th and 31st of October. It started in 1976, when a young woman heard on her CB that someone had thrown a rock from a bridge that crosses the Thruway. They decided they were going to park near these bridges, and if they saw something suspicious, they would call the authorities. KENT: And, so was born, the New York Pumpkin Patrol. Al May, WA2KFV, coordinates the ham volunteers for his county. It grew from CBers -- and later, Hams joined in to assist in the local police, and the New York State patrol. AL: It's become organized, and now covers the entire state. They work with 32 local police agencies. Our group covers central NY near Syracuse, covering 19 bridges. If we see something suspicious, we call net control and they call the authorities to have them investigate. I think that we're there that it prevents problems. For two or three years now, we've not had any problems. I believe just our presence being there is a deterrent. KENT: May says there are several hundred amateur operators who volunteer their time, being an extra set of eyes on the Thruway bridges. AL: The troopers took over organizing all the people. There are hundreds of bridges going over the New York State Thruway. It's a big job for them, and we feel we are an important part in giving them a hand in this successful program. KENT: For Amateur Radio Newsline, I'm Kent Peterson, KC0DGY. ***************** BREAK HERE Time for you to identify your station. We are the Amateur Radio Newsline, heard on bulletin stations around the world, including the Southeastern Massachusetts Amateur Radio Association W1AEC repeater, on 147 MHz, in Dartmouth, Massachusetts on Sundays at 8 pm. ************************ Posted by VPost v1.7.081019 --- Virtual Advanced Ver 2 for DOS * ORIGIN: The Thunderbolt BBS - wx1der.dyndns.org (801:1/7) þ Synchronet þ The Curmudeon's Place .