Featured Advertisers
Wed, Dec. 02  -   -  Mobile  -  RSS
  

Make a post about this story on FredTalk. Get a printer-friendly version of this page. E-mail this story to a friend.

-

Visit the Photo Place

View the Stafford County community page

Hams guide rescue crew

Ham operators guide help to road accident

Date published: 8/21/2007

by Hugh Muir

Alert action by two ham radio operators recently helped bring speedy assistance to the scene of a recent two-car collision near northern Stafford County.

During a heavy rainstorm on July 27, KG4UCM was driving south on State Route 612 in Fauquier County along the western edge of Quantico Marine Corps Base. "I took that route," he said, "because, in that weather, I thought it would be safer and easier than I-95."

At 6:30 p.m. he came upon two cars that had plunged into the southbound ditch. They had collided head-on minutes earlier. Other vehicles had stopped. Debris was in the road and people were running back and forth.

KG4UCM is Siegfried Gates, a North Stafford resident who is also a ham radio operator. "I pulled over and asked a guy if a first-aid kit was needed. He said 'yes' and I got my kit from the car and began to treat one of the victims."

Gates asked if anyone had called 911 and he was told there was no cell signal in the area. Gates had a 2-meter radio in his car. He turned it on and sent out a 911 call. Almost immediately, a voice came back. It was N2CLB.

N2CLB is Camden Bullock. He was driving south on Interstate 95 to his home in Fredericksburg from his job in Woodbridge. He was about 10 miles in a straight line from the accident. As usual, he was monitoring messages on his short-wave radio.

"Suddenly I heard Gates break in with emergency traffic," Bullock recalled. "He had just come upon a two-car, head-on accident with one victim trapped. He said he had no cell phone coverage."

Bullock turned on his mic and called "N2CLB break," which asked other amateur operators to keep off that frequency so that Bullock could stay in contact with Gates. At the same time, he called 911 on his cell phone; the call was routed to the Prince William County dispatcher. "Knowing the area, since I am an [emergency medical technician], I asked to be transferred to Stafford County's dispatcher because they were closer to the scene."


1  2  Next Page  


Follow us on
twitter
fredericksburg.com Facebook page


Read more stories about Stafford
Date published: 8/21/2007


What do you think?
Enter your FredTalk username and password to post a comment on this story. If you are registered on FredTalk or another part of this site, use that login here. Otherwise, you can just REGISTER here... .

Username: Password:

Post title:


Please keep it brief: (512-character limit)
Please make sure CAPS LOCK is off. Posts in ALL CAPS will be deleted.)


By checking this box, you agree to the terms of the FredTalk User agreement.