Wireless Institute of Australia


The Wireless Institute of Australia was formed in 1910, and is the first and oldest national amateur radio society in the world. It represents the amateur radio operators of Australia as the AR "peak body" in dealings with the Australian Communications and Media Authority, the authority under the government of Australia that administers communications within and external to Australia. The WIA publishes a bi-monthly journal for its membership called Amateur Radio. The organisation is the national society representing Australia in the International Amateur Radio Union.

Origins of the WIA

The WIA today is a single integrated nation-wide body, but it commenced as separate though collegiate state-based bodies and throughout most of its history was a federation of these state bodies. It traces its origins to the formation in 1910 of the New South Wales Institute of Telegraphy. The Wireless Institute of Victoria was established in 1911. Next came the short-lived Wireless Institute of Queensland, which held its first meeting in May 1912. The Western Australia Radio Club was formed shortly before first World War I.

The WIA and the ITU WRC-19

The WIA is an Australian "peak" Radio Amateur society. It has existed for over 100 years, and a foundation member of the IARU. The IARU represents the Radio Amateurs and their global spectrum allocations with ITU. The ITU World Radio Conference is being held this year and the WIA is sending two volunteers - a non trivial expense. We have already attended a number of preparatory meetings for this. The International Telecommunication Union, originally the International Telegraph Union, is a specialized agency of the United Nations that is responsible for issues that concern information and communication technologies. It is the oldest among all the 15 specialised agencies of UN.

Governance

On 16 May 2004, the Annual General Meeting adopted a new constitution that established a national organisational structure versus the former federal arrangement.

100th anniversary

The 100th anniversary of the WIA was commemorated in 2010. A special event callsign and station was established and used throughout 2010: callsign VK100WIA.
The Annual General Meeting was held in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, over 28–30 May 2010, and included:
The WIA conducts training sessions and has training materials for people wishing to become licensed Amateur Radio operator. For over 20 years, the WIA provided exam services for the Radio Amateur qualification, the AOCP. Under the ACMA deed 2009-2019. the testing utilised a system of accredited testers, and issued the authorisations for the ACMA to issue licences.
A new Deed of Agreement is now in place between the ACMA and the Australian Maritime College, to deliver amateur radio examinations, issue certificates and related callsign management.

Emergency communication

The Wireless Institute Civil Emergency Network trains and rehearses amateur radio operators in amateur radio emergency communications for call-out in civil emergencies. It is organised by state and region, with autonomous bodies in each state linked to that jurisdiction's disaster plan. In most states, WICEN is organised by a committee of the WIA state organisation, but in New South Wales and Victoria, WICEN is separately incorporated. WICEN has been activated for various emergencies, notably in recent years the Black Saturday bushfires on 7 February 2009 in Victoria.

Contests

The WIA sponsors or conducts various Australian and Australasian radio contests.

Remembrance Day (RD) Contest

Amateur radio operators in Australia participate in the Remembrance Day Contest on the weekend nearest Victory in the Pacific Day, 15 August. The competition commemorates amateur radio operators who died during World War II and encourages friendly participation to help improve the operating skills of participants. The contest runs for 24 hours, from 0300 UTC on the Saturday, preceded by a broadcast including a speech by a dignitary or notable Australian and the reading of the names of amateur radio operators who are known to have died. It is organised by the WIA, with operators in each Australian state contacting operators in other states, New Zealand, and Papua New Guinea. A trophy is awarded to the state that can boast the greatest rate of participation, based on a formula including: number of operators, number of contacts made, and radio frequency bands used.

Publications

Amateur Radio

Since October 1933, the WIA has published a monthly magazine reporting upon its activities. The magazine is primarily intended for the members but is available at specialist retailers. From 2018 the publication schedule was altered to bimonthly.

Callbook

An Amateur Radio licence is "broadcast" licence, with the requirement to regularly identify the station on-air by way of a callsign. A callbook lists these callsigns with related identification details. The first Australian callbook known to be published was in 1914, 4 years after the WIA was formed - with war-time gaps in publishing. Since 1954, the WIA has published its "Callbook" as part of a formal agreement with the communications regulator. The regulator then ceased publishing the call book. The call book lists the callsigns and contact details of all licensed Australian radio amateurs, together with a range of key information relevant to Australian amateur radio operators. The "Callbook" has typically been published on an annual basis. The licensee data was made available under exclusive arrangement with the regulator of the day. During 2020, the ACMA has advised the WIA WIA to commence
transitioning away from use of RRL data for call books.

Books

From time to time the WIA produces books on topics specific to Australian amateur radio. The most recent effort is "Wireless Men & Women at War", edited by a team including the WIA historian Peter Wolfenden VK3RV.

Notable members of the WIA