Welcome to Our November 2023 RI Section Newsletter

Here’s my riffs and rabbit hole research over the month on the sound byte going around about the average ham being aged 75.

It’s an arresting data point, but what do we really know when we know that? Are we asking the right questions to get to our shared goal? 

Let’s look first at the six generations alive today:

  • “The Silent Generation”, born 1925-1945 and in 2023 ages 98-78;
  • “Boomers”, born 1946-1964 and in 2023 ages 77-59;
  • “Gen X”, born 1965-1980 and in 2023 ages 58-43;
  • “Millennials / Gen Y”, born 1981-1996 and in 2023 ages 42-27;
  • “Gen Z” – digital natives, born 1997-2012 and in 2023 ages 26-11;
  • “Alphas” – all born in the 21st c to (mostly) Millennial parents and will be the largest generation in human history, born 2013-c.2025. Tech-savvy, diverse, screen-age natives. 

So, for context, this means a 75-year old ham is an older “Baby Boomer”.  

The math means there is a gap of three generations, or over 50 years (a half-century) between our average 75-year old ham and a High School student, aged 14-18. 

The good news is that if a general goal is to bring young people into the hobby, then the audience is vast. …Although we might want to clarify: younger than who? 

The request could be said to cover all generations. 

Notably including: 

  • families of digital-native Alphas & Gen Zs, and their tech-savvy Millennial parents
  • the 30% of American households now headed by solo adults, aged 20s to 90s; 
  • hobbyist social identity groupings untethered to age

As a call to action, “young people” feels incredibly imprecise. What is the problem we are trying to solve? Who is the “we”? Should each generation be tasked with mentoring the next one?

Interestingly, I think I heard that the average age of a newly licensed ham was now 50!?

If true, this would suggest that Boomers are indeed mentoring the next generation, as requested. Just as the Silent Generation mentored them

Or maybe we should just all be coaching everyone we can, regardless of age? Co-creating that give & take space of risk and slow but steady learning? How would you say the amateur radio community is doing to invite everyone to jump in, give learning something new a try, and keep at it until they can contribute and eventually lead?

Right now, I’m listening in on how to become an NTS Traffic handler on the nightly MA-RI phone net. It’s a great daily reminder of what’s involved to put yourself out there doing something you know very little about. Starting and stumbling with hands-on practice to get better in another one of radio’s many many skill building challenges. As they say, every journey starts with an intention and the first tentative steps. I want to send a huge thank you to the net controls for letting me learn in my own way and pace. A year ago, I sent a one-off Radiogram for an EMA SET. Now, a year later, I’m taking the measure of what it would mean to really get better at traffic handling, and the commitment I would need to make. Radio is such a big tent, and the opportunities are there for hams to give things a trial run before you set your priorities. Beta test if the mentoring safety net you will likely need is there for you. But again, the first steps you risk in just showing up to try can ofen be the hardest. I encourage you: give it a try, anyhow.  (And, FYI, the age of the net participants never comes up.)

Reddit is an online discussion forum with 130K members in the r/amateurradio community. LOTS of candid perspectives are posted there on the “younger people” question. For example, there was an informative thread on the question the community posed: 

Is Amateur Radio Facing a Demographic Cliff?

https://www.reddit.com/r/amateurradio/comments/yhm5nf/is_amateur_radio_facing_a_demographic_cliff/

It was humorous to see this reply:  I remember seeing someone had posted an article in this sub about like pre-1950s saying ssb rag chewing is going to kill the hobby lol. Edit: Here’s the link. https://www.reddit.com/r/amateurradio/comments/iri3ab/from_2020_nope_this_is_the_june_1927_issue_of_qst/

[Headline: From 2020? Nope, this is the June 1927 issue of QST, when old-timers were already saying amateur radio was doomed and this new-fangled “rag-chewing” was destroying the hobby.]

Another reddit comment shared:

“For many years, 12-18k new licenses were issued each year, except in 2007 when 24k new licenses were issued.

  • In 2020, thirty three thousand new licenses were issued.
  • In 2021, it was thirty five thousand.
  • 2022 is on track to meet or exceed 2021.”

So: maybe the data point about the average age of a ham being 75 is meant to drive home a change-is-coming message that is driven by the financial realities of a changing market? If so, then what is the time frame to relaunch a new message? And who is the intended audience capable of funding this in the timeline given?  We are all here to help reach the shared goal of a vital Amateur Radio community thriving into the next century. Let’s talk with one another.

As your new RI Section Manager, I have heard A LOT of push-back about messaging that many felt focused too exclusively on “young people”.  

Here’s my suggestion towards a shared definition of an inclusive, age-blind ham community culture. Definitely an ongoing conversation with lots of listening needed all around. 

  • An amateur radio operator walks the talk of a growth-mindset spirit that transcends age. Mentoring is a given. There is a bias toward being a Maker / Hacker, curious and experimental. (Are you surprised to hear that many pioneers of AI neural networks began as radio tinkerers?
  • Amateur radio is the hobby of a lifetime because it is a big tent with endless areas to explore. Priorities and perspectives mentioned on tech-oriented discussion forums include:
    • “Do NOT lead with “you can talk all over the world”. No one cares about that. The internet is the penultimate wide reaching network to anyone born after 1980. It’s the tech that they want. SDR’s, coding, IP, digital modes, bridging the internet to ham radio…” “computer hobbyists – local robotics, long range drone, linux user groups, things like that.”
    • “Focus on competitive and field elements of the hobby like SOTA & POTA, especially travel light modes like FT8 and CW.”
    • POTA, because it feels like an EmCom drill every time, hike out to a remote location, set up antennas and power, try to make contacts. It’s been fun, learning and experimenting..” 
    • ham radio is a wireless technology and radio science sandbox that is not only a really fun ultra-multifaceted hobby, but it’s also a prime extracurricular opportunity for young people (relative to the average amateur radio operator – a 55 year old white American).” https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=28803690
  • Getting started can be hard. Ideally, Amateur Radio offers right-size challenges for hands-on experiential  learning in a welcoming community that wants every ham to succeed. The right attitude helps here, all around. With best intentions hoped for. 
Please welcome our SIX new RI Hams & License Class Upgrades Oct 6- Nov 6, 2023

NEW Technicians

  • Maggie Heaney, KC1TOQ – Chepachet 
  • Nicholas Rodrigues, N1RRW – Lincoln 

NEW + Upgrade (1 General, 1 Extra)

  • Sean M Foley, KC1TNA – Woonsocket (Technician 10-3-2023 > General 10-24-2023)
  • Mark S Barabas, N2IRY – Saunderstown (Technician 10-2023 > Extra 11-2023) 

Upgrade

  • George R Archambault, WA1IWJ – North Smithfield (Technician > General )
  • Luis M Lopes, AJ1NL – Riverside (General > Extra )
Volunteers on the Air: W1AW/1

Do you want to get on the air and operate the iconic call sign W1AW/1?

Rhode Island is the host state operating the call sign for Volunteers on the Air from November 29th to December 6th. For information on how to sign up as a RI operator, please email Mike Corey, KI1U at [email protected]

Here’s the top 25 on the VOTA Leaderboard as of 30 November 2023.  https://vota.arrl.org/leaderboard.php?state=RI&submit=Filter+by+State

Congrats to all, with a special shout out to the Providence Radio Association, W1OP, for ongoing strong club commitment to VOTA 2023. Thank you!

Mesh Networking Infrastructure Collaboration Across New England 

Please consider joining the [email protected] and attending the lively, technically informative monthly gatherings of SMEs across New England (and the US) currently collaborating on building out an interconnected mesh network across New England. 

Use cases include:

  1. NTS traffic and EmComm with multi-media and work tool integration.
  2. Use of mobile mesh nodes to supplement coverage needed regardless of location.
  3. Remote video and spectral monitoring of repeater and network node sites including fire towers.
  4. Better integration with Government and Served Agency internet and office work tool partner processes.
  5. Independence from commercial power-dependent internet connectivity (with nodes equipped for extended operation following commercial power interruption.)

For more information, contact Rob Leiden, K1UI – the ARRL Assistant Director for Spectrum Protection & Utilization. https://nediv.arrl.org/spectrum-protection-utilization/

Slow Scan TV apps at next RI ARES meeting, December 6th at 7:30pm

Jeremy Taylor, K1JST (RI-SEC) will convene the next monthly RI ARES meeting on December 6, 2023 via Zoom to talk about Slow Scan TV apps and why he considers this a basic ham skill to add to your toolkit. 

If you are interested in learning more about RI ARES, please fill out this form:

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfy-vr-MtgU6kbqcjailbvXVsmJhWoMUpY-vnp3aaF5NTurtg/viewform

 

Providence RA Adds Storage Space

PRA W1OP logoFrom nediv.arrl.org:

Kudos to members of the Providence Radio Association in Johnston, RI, Wrapping up 2023, the PRA completed a challenging project: providing additional long term storage at the W1OP clubhouse.

A foundation was carefully measured and constructed by volunteers. Then a multi-purpose container and was delivered to the site and installed on the foundation.

Writes PRA President Dave “Tess” Tessitore, K1DT, “Thanks to all who worked on this project for several weeks, especially our House Chair [Bob Hart], KC1NAB!”

(via Facebook, photos by Gil Brown, N1BBM)

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New RI POTA parks launched November 11, 2023 UTC

Lots of new Rhode Island POTA activity as activators and hunters seek the eight new RI POTA parks revealed late Friday night. All sporting 5 digit designators.

Jim Garman, KC1QDZ, our RI POTA representative, wrote:

“We have added eight new Rhode Island references to POTA tonight. The new references are:

K-10541 Gull Cove, Portsmouth
K-10542 Camp Cronin, Narragansett
K-10543 Patriots’ Park, Portsmouth
K-10544 Jerimoth Hill, Foster
K-10545 Hillsdale Preserve, Richmond
K-10546 Eight Rod Farm WMA, Tiverton
K-10547 Silver Spring, North Kingstown
K-10548 Barber Pond, South Kingstown

Note that the POTA database does not include “State Fishing Area” as an option, so “State Recreation Area” was selected.

There will be a couple more in the next few days; the Wood-Pawcatuck Wild and Scenic River is very much on the table, but needs a little more research.

I want to thank all of you for your suggestions and for going out in person and vetting these places – you did a tremendous job! Please send any comments or questions back my way. Now go activate these parks, I suspect you will have plenty of hunters!

73 and POTA ON from Jim KC1QDZ”

Patriot’s Park, honoring the 1st Rhode Island Regiment, is one of the new RI POTA parks. First POTA activation on Veteran’s Day 2023.

RI ARES supported EasternMass SET Regional Exercise

Jeremy Taylor, RI Section Emergency Coordinator,  built on the RI Section Simulated Emergency Tests (conducted in October 2023) to challenge RI-ARES member Winlink skills in support of the Eastern Massachusetts SET conducted last Saturday, November 11, 2023 from 10-Noon.  He wrote:

“As we gave gotten pretty good at collecting airport weather information and sending it, I have a challenge for those who would like to accept it. … You have several options to report the traffic. Our primary method of reporting will be via WINLINK as that is what we are practicing this month. You can report via WINLINK to EMA SEC Rob Macedo KD1CY and cc RI SEC Jeremy Taylor K1JST. VHF or HF WINLINK are preferred, but telnet is also an option. You may collect

Alternatively, You can attempt to join one of their voice nets…”

RI Section Manager, Nancy Austin, KC1NEK, passed her ATIS (airport weather) reports via a 60m voice net. New hams may not realize how easy it is to operate on 60m simply by dialing up from their 80m antenna set-up to 5.3305 USB (Channel 1).

The RI ARES HF net, held on the 3rd Tuesday at 7:30pm, might consider offering a 60m voice net.

 

For more information on RI ARES, please see https://RIARES.org

The Consortium continues free ham training in Manville, RI

Teri DiIorio, W1PUP writes:

The Consortium is a free class done monthly by Jim Johnson, K1GND and Bob Beaudet W1YRC. It’s also a great opportunity to meet other ham, find information and get recommendations of all things Ham related!

The Consortium has been operating for over 19 years, and everyone is welcomed.

November’s topic was The Importance of Grounding. The location is the Sportsmen’s Club at 250 High St., Manville. 7PM. The Consortium meets monthly on the first Monday of the month (unless that is a holiday).

The 2024 schedule of topics to be covered include:

Jan 8, 2024 – All About Vertical Antennas

Feburary 5, 2024 – All About Horizontal Antennas

March 4, 2024 – All About Half Wave End Fed Antennas And Transformers

April 1 – All About SSB Settings , Protocol And QSLing

May 6 -Getting Ready For Field Day

More details at http://www.w1ddd.org/consortium.html .

Jim, K1GND and Bob W1YRC support the Consortium.
This is a separate program from BVARC, supported by a few members who thought it was a good idea.
See you at the Consortium…..

Scouting Special Event Station for “Turkey-in-the-Dirt 2023”

Mike Cullen K1NPT organized a wonderful Special Event last weekend using the K2BSA/1 callsign.  He writes:

This is BSA Troop 3 Newport’s annual pilgrimage to historic Yawgoog Scout Reservation, 1800 acres of forest in Rockville, Rhode Island (Washington County). The Camp is currently celebrating its 106th season.

Scouts dig a deep pit, line it with hot coals, and then cook 2-3 turkeys for several hours. Families and guests enjoyed an early Thanksgiving meal on Saturday night, November 11th.

Stations were invited to receive a picture of our activities that we sent via Winlink using VARA FM. 

Mike Cullen, K1NPT organized the Special Event Call Sign K2BSA/1 for the RI Narragansett Council Scouts 2023 “Turkey-in-the-Dirt” family cookout.

Foxhunt this Saturday November 18, 2023

Sheldon, K1KOS (BCRA) writes: The Bristol County Repeater Association (BCRA) is hosting a Foxhunt this upcoming Saturday November 18, 2023 from 10am-1pm.  Check-in starts at 9:45 am on the BCRA repeater, 145.150 MHz PL 123. The organizer is Skip Denault [email protected]

There will be TWO foxes within a 5-mile radius of 25 Church St., Swansea MA. Each operating with a 5 watt signal, each will transmit 1 minute of tone followed by Morse Code ID and 4 minutes of silence.

FOX1 will activate at 10:00 a.m. on 146.565 MHz FM and will be manned by K1KOS, Sheldon, in a Green Jeep Gladiator, plate K1KOS

FOX2 will activate at 10:02:30 a.m. on 146.430 MHz FM and will be manned by K1NDU, Tom, in a Red Chevy Blazer, plate FF4332

Communications with “Fox Control” can all be done over the BCRA repeater, including
checking in when you have found the fox. You may also speak with us in the Fox
vehicle using physical distancing if you wish. Chat and help on the repeater also.
When you have found the fox, your time and order of arrival will be recorded, and a
personalized certificate will be emailed to each participant.

Join us and have some good amateur radio fun!

 

RIC’s new Institute for Cybersecurity and Emerging Technologies (And Why Radio Literacy Matters)

Jen Easterly, Director of CISA, speaking at the launch of the new Institute for Cybersecurity and Emerging Technologies (6 November 2023, Providence RI)

This morning Rhode Island College celebrated the launch of the Institute for Cybersecurity and Emerging Technologies, which will be chaired by former RI Congressman Jim Langevin, a RIC alum. 

The Keynote Speaker was Jen Easterly, Director of CISA, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. Other speakers included Gov. Dan McKee, U.S. Senators Jack Reed and Sheldon Whitehouse, Congressman Seth Magaziner, House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi, Senate President Dominick Ruggerio, Lt. Gov. Sabina Matos, Providence Mayor Brett Smiley, Postsecondary Education Commissioner Shannon Gilkey, and RIC President Jack Warner. 

As Governor McKee and Director Easterly observed, this cyber career pathway is uniquely housed in the Business School and should prove transformational in providing Rhode Islanders the highly-paid, skilled workforce needed to face the challenges ahead. 

Everyone talks about the pressing problem of the cyber talent pipeline. In my strong and unchanged opinion, the Amateur Radio community has work to do to better explain how we are already contributing. 

From our proven hands-on and free experiential learning community model open to every age. Our ability to communicate around the world with no internet or commercial power. Our commitment to Public Service. Our deep bench of technical experts willing to jump in and contribute to problems around spectrum, sensors, satellites, emergency communication, situational awareness, software/hardware, drones, electronics old and emerging, … the list goes on and on.  

And yet at the gathering this morning, everyone I did a post-pandemic catch-up with was interested in my pivot to ham radio – but really had limited understanding of what amateur radio is, why it might be relevant in 2023, and how the ham community has already been a welcoming, mentoring high-tech career pathway pipeline for over a century. Cybersecurity is about more than IT. Radio literacy matters. This is a huge opportunity for amateur radio to paint a different portrait of itself. 

As the Institute for Cybersecurity and Emerging Technologies takes off, with the support of so many influential stakeholders across Rhode Island dedicated to its success, I encourage every RI radio amateur to continue being that positive ambassador in their own networks. Take the time to explain, again, what it is we do, why it matters, and what about this resonates with their audience?  Rhode Island’s motivated radio amateurs are team players ready to participate. Let’s tune up and talk. 

73, Nancy Austin KC1NEK

ARRL Rhode Island Section Manager

[email protected]

https://ri-arrl.org

MEMA Bunker Birthday Party

On November 4, 2023 the nearby Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) opened its underground Bunker to the public to commemorate 60 years since its dedication in 1963, a year after the Cuban Missile nuclear war Crisis. Saturday’s Open House included a pop-up exhibit of Civil Defense artifacts from that time. Informative videos throughout helpfully oriented you to the past and present functionality of the Bunker.

 

Much has changed in 60 years, but the need for reliable communication has not. 

The event was a great opportunity to listen and share ideas about the relevance and value of amateur radio operators and ARES to Served Agencies in 2023 at this time of change. 

Chris Grazioso (KB1UTL) – the Director of UAS Operations, Drone Operations Program, Mass DOT, Aeronautics Division put it this way:  In his 30+ year career as a Public Safety professional, almost every After Action Report cites a concern about a breakdown in communications, someplace in the report.  In his experience, being a ham has helped him be a better trained operator, able to adjust and keep vital communication channels going one way or the other, when others couldn’t. 

(Right) Chris Grazioso, KB1UTL – Director of UAS Operations, Drone Operations Program

The dynamic new Director of MEMA, Dawn Brantley (right) was licensed c.2008 when working in Emergency Management in radio-friendly Alaska. Not currently an active ham, it was a welcome conversation to talk about the ease of getting licensed in 2023 using the online, self-study platform, HamStudy.org. Her security detail, Emily, was definitely interested in learning more.   

The Rhode Island Section looks forward to continued conversations with our New England neighbors. Especially now with Jeremy Taylor, K1JST, our new RI Section Emergency Coordinator (SEC) in place and a new team coming together to reshape RI ARES. Let’s share lessons learned. Pitch the message why amateur radio literacy adds value. And put together the training path that will get us from here to there – whether six months,  six years,  or a full 60 years on to 2083.  We start here, today. 

73, Nancy Austin, KC1NEK

Rhode Island Section Manager

[email protected]

You’re Invited to the Consortium

Teri Diiorio, W1PUP, writes on the RI-ARES mailing list:

The Consortium is a monthly free class run by Jim Johnson, K1GND, and Bob Beaudet, W1YRC. It’s also a great opportunity to meet other hams, find information and get recommendations of all things ham related!

The Consortium has been operating for over 19 years, and everyone is welcome.

The topic on November 6, 2023, will be “The Importance of Grounding.” The location is the Sportsmen’s Club at 250 High Street, Manville at 7:00 PM.

More details at http://www.w1ddd.org/consortium.html.

Jim, K1GND and Bob W1YRC support the Consortium.

This is a separate program from BVARC, supported by a few members who thought it was a good idea.

See you at the Consortium.