Los Angeles Times

Seismic safety wins a round

Congress is pushing back against proposed cuts to warning and detection systems.

- By Rong-Gong Lin II

Congress has been pushing back against cuts in seismic safety funding proposed in President Trump’s budget.

First, a congressio­nal panel voted last week to keep funding a West Coast earthquake early warning system that could have been shut down under the proposed budget.

Then, a different subcommitt­ee voted to continue funding a global tsunami detection system that gives U.S. officials an accurate forecast of when and how big floodwater­s will arrive from a distant earthquake.

The House of Representa­tives’ appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee overseeing the Department of Commerce voted Thursday to reject a provision in Trump’s proposed budget that would have ended funding of the U.S. deep-ocean tsunami sensor network.

Ending funding for the $12-million network would have eventually shut it down, as batteries for the system’s 39 stations, located

on sea floors around the world, would run out of power in about two years.

The deep-ocean tsunami sensing system was built after a false tsunami alert in 1986 caused an unneeded evacuation of Honolulu’s famed tourist district, Waikiki, trapping cars in the evacuation zone and costing the state tens of millions of dollars.

The system was modernized and expanded to its latest incarnatio­n after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, which killed more than 235,000 people and underscore­d the dangers of an inadequate tsunami warning system.

No deep-ocean sensors existed in the Indian Ocean when that tsunami struck, and the disaster led thenPresid­ent George W. Bush and Congress to back the creation of a U.S.-led global tsunami sensing system, which increased the number of deep-ocean sensors operated by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion to 39 from six. There are also now 21 other sensors operated by eight other nations.

The panel also rejected a proposed reduction in funding for the U.S. tsunami warning centers. The Trump administra­tion suggested cutting the number of tsunami warning centers from two to one and slash staffing from 40 full-time employees to 15 — saving $11 million.

“The committee does not adopt the proposed reduction for the Tsunami Warning Centers ... or the Deepocean Assessment and Reporting of Tsunamis (DART) buoys,” a subcommitt­ee report said.

Congressio­nal aides said the subcommitt­ee also rejected a proposal to end $6 million in grants given to states to reduce tsunami hazards, which fund emergency drills and the drawing of flood maps and evacuation plans.

A document explaining the Trump administra­tion’s plan acknowledg­ed that “tough choices” were made to reduce funding, but “is necessary as we move toward a more efficient government that re-focuses on national security and core government functions.”

The sensing system operates on a simple premise: recording the tsunami as it races through the deep ocean, before it strikes the shore.

Officials long ago realized that simply relying on how big an earthquake is in the ocean cannot accurately predict a tsunami. Sometimes, big earthquake­s produce no tsunami, and at other times a moderate temblor might conjure up a tsunami surprise.

The solution developed by NOAA scientists was to send ships into the deep ocean and drop sensors that would sink to the sea floor, according to Eddie Bernard, a former director of the U.S. Pacific Tsunami Warning Center and a key architect of the system. The sensors would detect the tsunami as it rushed through and then send signals to a connected floating buoy that would send data to the warning centers by satellite.

The panel also rejected a proposed $11-million cut for the National Mesonet Program, a network of automated weather stations that can indicate rapidly deteriorat­ing weather conditions. If the cut had gone through, NOAA would not have been able to monitor these conditions in all 50 states, and would have had to “prioritize states most susceptibl­e to tornadoes and severe weather.”

Also reversed was the proposed terminatio­n in an investment to extend operationa­l weather outlooks from 16 days to 30 days, saving $5 million, and a suggested halt to a project that would improve tornado forecasts in the southeaste­rn United States, which would have also saved $5 million.

The budget proposal will next be considered by the full House Appropriat­ions Committee, and eventually the full House of Representa­tives and the Senate will weigh in before a budget is sent to Trump. The next budget year begins Oct. 1.

The president’s budget proposals can be changed significan­tly by Congress, which takes over the process once the administra­tion submits its recommenda­tions.

A separate congressio­nal subcommitt­ee, which oversees the Department of the Interior, said last week that the U.S. Geological Survey should be allowed to continue receiving the same $10.2 million the earthquake early warning system received in the last budget.

The system is expected to begin limited public operation by next year if the network continues to receive stable funding.

Rep. Ken Calvert (R-Corona), chairman of the subcommitt­ee, said last week he has been a big supporter of the earthquake early warning system and was the architect behind the decision to allocate $10.2 million to the system in the last budget year.

Calvert said the funding has backing from both parties.

 ?? Francis R. Malasig EPA ?? A WOMAN walks past a tsunami evacuation sign south of Manila. A U.S. congressio­nal panel voted to continue funding a global tsunami detection system.
Francis R. Malasig EPA A WOMAN walks past a tsunami evacuation sign south of Manila. A U.S. congressio­nal panel voted to continue funding a global tsunami detection system.

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