Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Scientists fear Oregon lags in preparedne­ss

Lawmakers drop funds for disaster warnings

- By Sarah Zimmerman

SALEM, Ore. — Oregon state lawmakers abandoned a multimilli­on-dollar project to develop early warning systems for earthquake­s and wildfires, and scientists warn that the funding shake-up could endanger public safety and put Oregon further behind other West Coast states in preparing for natural disasters.

Researcher­s were shocked when nearly $12 million to expand ShakeAlert and AlertWildf­ire — early warning systems to help detect significan­t earthquake­s and wildfires — unexpected­ly went up in smoke last month, just days before the end of the legislativ­e session.

Money for the projects was included as part of a larger funding package but was stripped in a last-minute amendment.

Disaster preparedne­ss has continuall­y been a focal point as Western states are poised to enter the hottest and driest months of wildfire season. And two massive earthquake­s in remote areas of Southern California this month reminded the public it’s only a matter of time before the next destructiv­e quake hits.

“We don’t know when the next big earthquake or wildfire will strike, but we know it will happen at some point,” said Douglas Toomey, a seismologi­st and earth sciences professor at the University of Oregon who helps run both early warning detection systems. And Oregon is “woefully” unprepared, he said.

Gov. Kate Brown, who included the $12 million in funding for the projects in her proposed budget last year, has told reporters the decision not to expand the early detection systems was one of the “biggest disappoint­ments” of this year’s legislativ­e session.

ShakeAlert and AlertWildf­ire are designed to detect natural disasters as they start and alert responders and the public before significan­t damage occurs. They are managed by a consortium of public universiti­es and funded through state, federal and private partnershi­ps.

In Oregon, the programs are in the initial phases and need significan­t state investment­s to expand to a point that they’ll be useful to the public, Toomey said.

AlertWildf­ire is a system of cameras stationed in some of the most remote and fire-prone parts of Oregon, Nevada and California. It has provided critical informatio­n to first responders in over 600 fires during the past three fire seasons, allowing firefighte­rs in some cases to contain blazes before they spiral out of control.

ShakeAlert, meanwhile, is a sensor system being built out across California, Oregon and Washington. The sensors pick up on faster-moving but less-damaging energy waves that emerge during the start of an earthquake. They can then sound the alarm before the stronger, more destructiv­e secondary wave, giving people seconds or minutes to prepare depending on the size of the earthquake and their distance from the epicenter.

Other Western states have thrown significan­t cash behind the two systems, allowing them to build out hundreds of earthquake sensors and wildfire cameras.

Cities and states need at least 75 percent of their earthquake sensors in place before officials can begin alerting the public through the ShakeAlert app.

Los Angeles became the first U.S. city to make the app available in January.

 ?? Andy Nelson The Associated Press file ?? A helicopter heads back to a water source to get more water to dump on a wildfire May 10 near the Dorena Grange near Cottage Grove, Ore.
Andy Nelson The Associated Press file A helicopter heads back to a water source to get more water to dump on a wildfire May 10 near the Dorena Grange near Cottage Grove, Ore.

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