
Yessika and Baby Leo. I think he’ll be stuck with that nickname for life.
“Any fool can make something complicated. It takes a genius to make it simple.” - Woody Guthrie
Working to make the confusing understandable, and the simple...well, you figure out the rest.
What does it take to be an expert in something?
Experts w/ <10k followers sometimes less than a 100, <1000 likes on FB and no #SMEM history not a “Pro or “Expert” your’e “Fraud” #SMEMChat.
— CAL FIRE NEWS (@CalFireNews)
Is this a valid criticism?
Has SMEM become a marketing tool? Too many people slap a #smem hashtag on stuff that really doesn’t belong.
What is SMEM? What should it be?
My thoughts are that SMEM should be used on messages that are directed to the target public.
Maybe use SM4EM for inter-office communications, or subject matter that doesn’t need to be directed to the general public.
Right now there is no standard hashtag being pushed for John Q Public to follow for information and updates.
A management workshop, based on Harvard business school techniques, divided 110 people into eleven groups of ten people each. The groups were asked to list all of the attributes that came to mind. After a period of time they were told to stop writing lists and vote on their top eight. Then all eleven groups combined their results into the following top eight attributes:
Those are the top eight that beat out all others. What others might you add? This can be a good discussion at any organizational meeting.
More than one professional in the field of Search and Rescue or Emergency Response Management has been known to say that “hams can be too much of a good thing.” What they refer to is the propensity of hams to respond en-mass to a call out without regard to their own skills, physical limitations, body condition, time commitment, and mental state.
Over time, these professionals, often “hams” themselves, reach a state where they decline to again issue a call out or utilize other hams in their operations. In essence, they’ve been “burned” once too often by the untrained and unskilled responders who think just because they hold an Amateur Radio license they are natural emergency operators. Their experience proves that merely holding a “ham” license does not an emergency responder make. It takes effort, study and training to be a good emergency responder. Search and Rescue teams know that because of their endless training and drills. They welcome with open arms seriously interested Radio Amateurs who have the self-discipline to undergo rigorous training similar to theirs and the commitment to stay with the program. Think about it. What kind of a potential responder are you? Are you in the small, but elite, fraternity of those highly trained and dedicated? Or are you in a larger group of those with a little training, a little knowledge and fluctuating interest? Or are you in the largest group that has no training, no knowledge of emergency communications, but feel you can help just because you have an Amateur Radio license? Which of these three groups would you like to have assisting if YOUR family’s life and well being were at stake? —-Cary Mangum, W6WWW
Originally published as RACES Bulletin 286, by the California Office of Emergency Services, on August 9, 1993
This piece is from 1993, but it’s still true to this day!Let’s face it, for the fact that it is: some governments don’t really understand about Emergency Communications Units; they don’t really understand how to work with and utilize volunteers, including hams, some of whom are…
Amateur Radio related.
Originally published as RACES Bulletin 286, by the California Office of Emergency Services, on August 9, 1993