Common use of Emergency Communications Clause in Contracts

Emergency Communications. The emergemcy exception provides for a message to be sent by any means during serious emergencies. This broad exception allows any means necessary to communicate when there is immediate danger. It does require that the exceptional use must cease promptly when the imminent danger ends. Talking on the radio is different than speaking with someone by telephone or face-to-face. Differences in audio quality and noise can make understanding difficult. Thus, how you speak will improve how well someone else understands your message. Using well-established radio procedures ensures that your message has the best chance of being understood by the receiving radio station. RADIO PROCEDURES Radio operators worldwide follow international procedures that define the process of communicating on the radio. Practicing proper radio procedures will mark you as a professional radio operator. When making a telephone call you (1) dial a number, (2) wait for the other party to answer, (3) then information is exchanged, and finally (4) you hang-up to end the call. Radio procedures follow a similar pattern. DNR uses the following radio procedure, which follows the international standard. In which most calls have three parts: ⮚ Establish the Call — the calling station initiates the call.

Appears in 2 contracts

Sources: Radio Agreement, Radio Agreement