WQZQ295 Posted July 11, 2022 Report Share Posted July 11, 2022 I'm probably beating a dead horse with this. Does, anyone know if there is a way to get a city to place a GMRS antenna, city limits, county, etc, where it would be open to everyone. Has anyone any experience with this. There are vey few in my state and the ones that do exist are private. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kidphc Posted July 11, 2022 Report Share Posted July 11, 2022 You might have a better chance if your city has a REACT team or emergency communication team. Kinda like https://mcacs.net/ whom has P25 repeaters in our area. Maybe even amateur radio clubs might be able to help. We are fortunate, here we have REACT repeaters peppering D.C. (you need to be a REACT member to use). I also got access to a repeater, part of a several repeaters, which are not "LISTED" on purpose. Their main function is for the Red Cross. I guess the owner of the repeaters select users to limit usage. Most of us that have access do not mention them, nor do we share the information (mostly out of respect for the owner and its purpose, not to be selfish). The real repeaters (the one I have access to) are big $$$$$, commercial antennas, commercial gear on commercial sites. You may get the city to budget repeaters for emergency communication usage. Stating regular use of the system by locals can assure the system is ready when needed. I do imagine it being tough with a city that has a small population. Plus most municipalities will want to set up a emergency communication system on p25 (preferably encrypted) for interagency interoperability (most likely P25 phase2). A Retvis 97 is just not going to cut it for city coverage. Maybe start a local GMRS Club with the amateur radio operators? WQZQ295 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WRQW894 Posted July 11, 2022 Report Share Posted July 11, 2022 (edited) Meet your local HAM club or 911 Radio Network Operator--they will likely have access to hill-top towers and may be receptive to running or leasing you some space. In my county, I am the 911 Radio admin and I am currently working with my UHF/VHF team on feasibility of using spare space in my hill-top towers for a GMRS repeater re-using some state-provided repeater gear we have just acquired as spares. I'm just waiting on them doing some surveying to make sure it won't interfere with our 700MHz PS network or our UHF/VHF fall-back (legacy) networks. Edited July 11, 2022 by WRQW894 doubled, whoops! WQZQ295 and wayoverthere 1 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteveShannon Posted July 11, 2022 Report Share Posted July 11, 2022 1 hour ago, WQZQ295 said: I'm probably beating a dead horse with this. Does, anyone know if there is a way to get a city to place a GMRS antenna, city limits, county, etc, where it would be open to everyone. Has anyone any experience with this. There are vey few in my state and the ones that do exist are private. Keep in mind that you need more than an antenna if you want to benefit the public. You’ll need a repeater and a duplexer and some way to power it all. WQZQ295 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OffRoaderX Posted July 11, 2022 Report Share Posted July 11, 2022 One of the members of our group recently was successful in having his city put up an open GMRS repeater intended primarily for emergency use, but also available the rest of the time. He is now trying to expand to other local cities but is facing much resistance and typical bureaucracy and red-tape of getting the city government to approve everything. WQZQ295 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MichaelLAX Posted July 11, 2022 Report Share Posted July 11, 2022 I am a bit confused: the purpose of getting "a city" to put up an open GMRS repeater is to save the initial and ongoing cost of such a setup? TOM47 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TOM47 Posted July 11, 2022 Report Share Posted July 11, 2022 27 minutes ago, OffRoaderX said: He is now trying to expand to other local cities but is facing much resistance and typical bureaucracy and red-tape. WHAT GMRS bureaucracy and red-tape.? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BoxCar Posted July 11, 2022 Report Share Posted July 11, 2022 I don't believe a city (government) can hold a GMRS license. A city (government) employee can hold a license. WQZQ295 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wayoverthere Posted July 11, 2022 Report Share Posted July 11, 2022 1 hour ago, TOM47 said: WHAT GMRS bureaucracy and red-tape.? I think that means the red tape of talking the city into bankrolling the cost of equipment and/or tower placement, not the gmrs side of things. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KAF6045 Posted July 11, 2022 Report Share Posted July 11, 2022 3 hours ago, OffRoaderX said: One of the members of our group recently was successful in having his city put up an open GMRS repeater intended primarily for emergency use, but also available the rest of the time. He is now trying to expand to other local cities but is facing much resistance and typical bureaucracy and red-tape of getting the city government to approve everything. Whereas 25 years ago a 250 page book covered GMRS repeater listings... Most required one to contact the owner for access. Those with semi-open access (which means the listing had a clause "only for emergency and traveller assistance...." followed by a CTCSS tone) tended to be government entities. For examples: .575 PL 146.2; Grand Rapids City Government Radio Engineering[sponsor still active license]... .725 PL 141.3; WXMI (TV 17)[expired in 2000] Both entries required prior approval for use of other CTCSS tones... Of course, as businesses transitioned to narrow band gear they likely gave up the GMRS licenses WQZQ295 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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