In an emergency, and as long as you are a licensed ham, you may transmit on ANY amateur frequency allocated by the FCC as immediately necessary to carry priority radio traffic.
I work for Autozone's major competitor, Advance Auto Parts, and we're nearing completion of a company-wide changeover from linux based in-store servers and terminals to, ahem, 'another' opreating system.
Boy, guess those Advance executives were really thinking ahead- that was a close one, wheew.
In an emergency, and as long as you are a licensed ham, you may transmit on ANY amateur frequency allocated by the FCC as immediately necessary to carry priority radio traffic.
This quote is by Einstein; credit where credit is due.
I work for Autozone's major competitor, Advance Auto Parts, and we're nearing completion of a company-wide changeover from linux based in-store servers and terminals to, ahem, 'another' opreating system. Boy, guess those Advance executives were really thinking ahead- that was a close one, wheew.