SB QST @ ARL $ARLB064 ARLB064 Bonnie visits Virginia ZCZC AG64 QST de W1AW ARRL Bulletin 64 ARLB064 From ARRL Headquarters Newington CT August 28, 1998 To all radio amateurs SB QST ARL ARLB064 ARLB064 Bonnie visits Virginia Hurricane Bonnie has moved away from North Carolina and now is unleashing her renewed fury on the Tidewater area of Southeastern Virginia. Bonnie was downgraded to a tropical storm Thursday, August 27, and emergency preparations had abated. But the storm picked up steam again as it headed north and regained hurricane status, catching hams and emergency officials off guard. The storm was sitting off the North Carolina/Virginia Border today and was expected to hug the coast on its way to New England. On August 26, Virginia ARES/RACES activated in anticipation of the storm. Virginia State RACES Officer and ARES SEC Frank Mackey, K4EC, reported that local emergency operation centers were staffed with hams, and many shelters opened in anticipation of evacuations. ARES station W4ZA at the state EOC was activated. As the storm appeared to be losing strength, Mackey reported ham radio operations stood down and shelters were closed. Then, Bonnie changed her mind. The Tidewater area--including Hampton Roads, Norfolk, Virginia Beach, and Chesapeake--has experienced heavy rain and damaging winds clocked unofficially at more than 100 MPH. The home of District 9 Emergency Coordinator Cynthia Rohrer, AE4EF, in Chesapeake suffered extensive structural damage, and outbuildings were totally demolished. ''It was impossible for her to get out of their residence due to extensive debris,'' Mackey said. ''Damage from fallen trees and downed power poles appears to be very extensive.'' He said emergency managers and police were asking people to stay off the streets unless absolutely necessary. Virginia Electric Power reported more than 250,000 customers without power. Officials closed the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel due to the strong winds. A roof was reported blown off an apartment building in the Oceanview section of Norfolk. ''The Norfolk area was still reeling under continued battering, higher-than-expected tidal surge coupled with local high tides, and strong winds,'' Mackey said Friday. SKYWARN and emergency nets remained active in the region. Meanwhile, in North Carolina, Section Manager Reed Whitten, AB4W, reports many shelters and EOCs had released their Amateur Radio operators, and HF nets went into standby mode. A few EOCs and shelters remain active, and the Tar Heel Emergency Net (3.923/7.232 MHz) was monitoring for them. The net remained in continuous operation for more than two days, providing communication for Emergency Management and relief agencies. Bonnie could move into the Northeast by the weekend. Hams in the Southeast have been keeping close watch on Hurricane Danielle, which could arrive August 31. In Texas, meanwhile, the remnants of Tropical Storm Charley flooded parts of South Texas, leaving much of the town of Del Rio near the Rio Grande under water. At least 15 deaths in Texas and Mexico were blamed on the floods. Del Rio remained under a flash flood warning on Thursday, and President Clinton declared Val Verde County a disaster area. Among the hams known to be passing message traffic with the Del Rio area was Loyd Overcash, KM5OE, in Houston. In New Braunfels, South Texas Section Manager Ray Taylor, N5NAV, worked with the American Red Cross and the Texas Department of Public Safety to coordinate communication. He also helped pass health-and-welfare traffic for those with family and friends in the flooded areas. Hams in South Texas were asked August 24 to cooperate by recognizing a voluntary communications emergency and relinquishing frequencies on 40 and 75 meters for emergency and health-and-welfare traffic. The communications emergency was canceled August 27. NNNN /EX