NEWS
The Flotilla will be having
its Final Fall Fling on Sunday, October 11, 2009. more...
PROPER PPE
"Auxiliarists may not
wear any distinctive part of the uniform or official Auxiliary insignia
with civilian clothing."
more...
AUXCHEF
This program is designed to
prepare you to assist in food preparation in Coast Guard stations,
Sectors, cutters and anywhere else that the Coast Guard has personnel. more... |
Welcome
Flotilla 04-08 is a hard working Flotilla . We have just a few members,
38, and are always looking for
more. Our members get along and everyone is happy in the activities and
positions they fulfill for the USCGAUX.
Explore our pages here and learn more about us and what
you can do in the Auxiliary

New radio tower worth the wait
10/2/2006
6:00 PM (WROC-TV)
New radio tower worth the wait
There's a stick of steel now keeping boaters safer as they ply the
waters of Lake Ontario. News 8 Now's Dave McKinley reports on how it
took a decade and a half of perseverance, to make it so.
To most it appears as nothing more than a 60-foot stick of steel,
standing along a lonely stretch of Lake Ontario shoreline. But for
mariners, it is the long sought after last link in communicating between
Coast Guard stations in Buffalo and Rochester. Because for the longest
time, the lack of something like it, left boaters in potentially dire
straights, should they get in trouble in the areas north of Devils Nose
in Hamlin Beach State Park.
"It was very iffy if a boater got in trouble in that area whether they
could reach help either from Buffalo or the station Rochester from their
boat radio," says Ann Roller of the US Coast Guard Auxiliary.
Despite the apparent need, the Coast Guard was unable to rectify the
situation.
"They have a limited budget, it's maybe one-tenth what other military
has. They have so many other needs that a radio tower on the shores of
Lake Ontario doesn't rank up as high as national security," says Roller.
So members of the Hamlin Flotilla of the Us Coast Guard Auxiliary
decided they'd do something about it.
"Well, we all come from different backgrounds, we're a pretty diverse
group," says Peter Urgola of the US Coast Guard Auxiliary.
So they scrounged parts:
"The tower itself, the wiring the coupling," says Roller.
And raised the money, and raised the tower, themselves.
"And they kept pushing year after year and one little thing would get
done one year and then they'd push again and another thing would get
done the next year," says Roller.
It took them 15 years but, by golly, they got it done.
"Slow but sure, like the tortoise!" says Roller.
So perhaps this is indeed more than a tower of steel...it could well be
a monument of sorts, to a dedicated group of volunteers who come
heck--or high water--were determined to put something back in to the
community.
"And I think for the most part that's the motivation for all the folks
that ultimately join the auxiliary, is to put something back into the
community," says Urgola.
Most boaters have cell phones, but the coast guard auxiliary says they
can't replace ship to shore radios. For one thing, cell phones are iffy
once you're out on the lake, and even you can place a call- it only
reaches one party, whereas an S.O.S. put out over a radio frequency
could reach any number of other boaters--or auxiliary members who may be
listening in from shore.
|
Weather Reports
Flotilla Marks:
| PE Classes |
8 |
| VSC |
54 |
| RB Visits |
5 |
| PA Events |
3 |
| MT Classes |
1 |
| Safety Patrols |
344.7 hours |
| SARs |
114.10 hours |
| Lives Saved |
0 |
|
all values are year to date
more information |
 |