BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Hams Help Forecasters wit
De:       ARRL de WD1CKS
Data:     Fri, 27 Feb 2026 14:00:00 +0000
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 02/27/2026 

A historic blizzard paralyzed much of the Northeast in late February, and
amateur radio operators were on the air to help forecasters keep track of the
storm's impact. Southeastern New England was one of the hardest-hit areas. ARRL
Eastern Massachusetts Section Emergency Coordinator and Boston-area SKYWARN
Coordinator Rob Macedo, KD1CY, provided this summary for ARRL News:

A severe blizzard left its mark on Southeast New England with massive amounts
of snow, vehicles and even plows getting stuck, damaging winds gusts to
hurricane force causing ~350,000 customers to lose power in Massachusetts and
Rhode Island, and some coastal flooding issues at high tide. The blizzard broke
Rhode Island's state record[1] for snowfall with 37.8 inches of snow in
Providence. ARES-SKYWARN Nets across southern New England were activated with
the WX1BOX[2] amateur radio team to support the National Weather Service (NWS)
Boston/Norton office, as well as local and state emergency management and
broadcast media, with timely updates on the storm.

We had ARES-SKYWARN nets activating on an every 1-2 hour basis providing
snowfall, wind gust, wind damage and coastal flood reports. The nets were very
active with great participation, allowing a comprehensive situational
awareness. We also interacted with many non-amateur radio SKYWARN spotters via
social media.

Reports of snowfall as high as 43 inches in Tiverton, Rhode Island, and 41
inches in Fall River, Massachusetts, were received from SKYWARN spotters.
Macedo's hometown of New Bedford, Msssachusetts, recorded 37 inches of snow.

Amateur Radio SKYWARN Nets were active on over a dozen repeaters across
southern New England, along with the New England Amateur Radio VoIP Reflector
system[3] with snowfall, wind damage and wind gust reports. The Amateur Radio
Net Plan for Massachusetts was sent into Massachusetts Emergency Management in
an ICS-205 to ESF-2 as part of a closer working relationship with state
emergency management. Well over 1,000 reports were generated from these nets
and shared with partner agencies and the media. Blizzard conditions were met at
numerous sites[4] across southern New England.

Eastern Massachusetts ARES[5] was placed on stand-by on Sunday 2/22/26 for any
partner agencies and to augment and enhance support for the ARES-SKYWARN Nets
for participation. Cape Cod ARES members Chris Ranney, WA1CMR, and Dennis
Driscoll, N1DRN, deployed to support operations in the town of Sandwich,
providing auxiliary communications between their EOC and a shelter for the
town. Their operation secured on Wednesday evening, February 25.

Amateur radio received media attention on The Weather Channel several times
throughout the blizzard. Jim Cantore stated, "When we get all these
observations, it comes from SKYWARN spotters and amateur radio operators
because when people can't communicate and the phone lines down, the amateur
radio operators are all we got."

The WX1BOX[6] website will be updated with a Post Blizzard Coordination Message
at the end of the week with more detailed information on the blizzard across
southern New England.

ARRL News and The ARRL Letter will also provide reports from other parts of the
affected region as they are received.


[1] https://forecast.weather.gov/product.php?site=NWS&product=RER&issuedby=PVD
[2] https://www.wx1box.org/
[3] https://new-eng.com/
[4] https://www.weather.gov/media/box/Blizzard2026.pdf
[5] https://ema.arrl.org/ares
[6] https://www.wx1box.org/
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