NEWS RELEASE - Province of British Columbia

NEWS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure
2016TRAN0116-000941
Emergency Management BC
June 5, 2016
Earthquake and tsunami exercise in Port Alberni recalls shaky past
VICTORIA ʹFive decades after the Port Alberni tsunami devastated local residences and
businesses, the Province of British Columbia is hosting an exercise to test the BC Earthquake
Immediate Response Plan and promote interagency co-operation among both internal and
external agencies that support emergency response.
On March 27, 1964, a massive earthquake struck Prince William Sound in Alaska. The
earthquake registered 9.2 on the Richter scale and lasted four-and-a-half minutes, which made
it the most powerful recorded earthquake in U.S. history, and the second most powerful
earthquake ever recorded in the world. The tsunami waves resulting from this earthquake
claimed over one-hundred lives in the United States.
Just after midnight on March 28, 1964, tsunami waves from the earthquake funnelled up 40
kilometres of the Alberni Inlet, amplifying their height and impact, and a series of waves lifted
homes off their foundations and upended cars. In all, approximately 300 homes and businesses
were damaged in and around Port Alberni.
Much has changed in British Columbia͛s earthquake response in the five decades since the
1964 Alaskan Earthquake, including better building codes, increasingly accurate early response
technology, the formation of response groups like Emergency Management BC (EMBC) and the
appointment of Naomi Yamamoto as B.C.͛s first Minister of State for Emergency Preparedness.
Today, in the event a tsunami watch, advisory or warning is issued by the National Tsunami
Warning Centre (NTWC), the Provincial Emergency Notification System (PENS) is activated by
EMBC and relays this critical information to local governments, emergency officials, media, first
responders like police and fire departments, as well as partner agencies like the coast guard
and military. PENS can initially transmit approximately 800 automated voice notices and 450
emails. The notifications are then further redistributed through government social media
channels, federal advisories, partner agencies, marine radio, and a number of other agency
systems.
In 2011, Emergency Management BC also developed the BC Emergency Management System
(BCEMS), a comprehensive framework that provides a structure for a standardized approach to
developing, coordinating and implementing emergency management programs across the
province. BCEMS is a four-phase emergency management system ʹMitigation, Preparedness,
Response, and Recovery ʹrather than focusing exclusively on emergency response.
From June 7-10, 2016, Exercise Coastal Response, the province͛s first full-scale earthquake and
tsunami response exercise brings together stakeholders from all levels of government, as well
as Emergency Management BC staff, First Nations, Crown corporations, critical infrastructure
owners and non-government organizations involved in provincial-level response to model how
they would collaboratively work to respond to the impacts of a catastrophic event along coastal
British Columbia. It tests the procedures set out in the BC Earthquake Immediate Response
Plan and promotes interagency co-operation among internal and external agencies that
support emergency response.
During the same timeframe, neighbouring states and the U.S. Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) Region 10 are conducting an exercise called Cascadia Rising 2016. As well,
Canadian federal departments involved in earthquake response will be conducting Exercise
Pacific Quake and Exercise Staunch Maple.
Minister of State for Emergency Preparedness, Naomi Yamamoto ʹ
͞Although the devastation that resulted from the 1964 Earthquake happened over five decades
ago, there are many lessons our government has learned from it and it helps to illustrate why
we, as a government, are investing so much into Exercise Coastal Response and into emergency
preparedness as a whole to help protect the communities of B.C. and each and every British
Columbian.͟
Port Alberni mayor, Mike Ruttan ʹ
͞The 1964 tsunami was a wake-up call to the dangers posed by earthquakes along the Pacific
coast and beyond. While our community has made tremendous progress since then to mitigate
the impacts of future events, as individuals we all must take steps to prepare our homes and
families to cope during an emergency.͟
Quick Facts:
Province͛s Seismic Accomplishments
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Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure:
ƕ Over $4 billion in bridge and large highway seismic retrofits
Emergency Management BC:
ƕ Hosting the $1.2 million provincial-level earthquake and tsunami exercise with
partners
ƕ $95,000 invested in improvements to the Provincial Emergency Notification System
(PENS)
ƕ $200,000 per year in funding to Vancouver͛s Heavy Urban Search and Rescue
(HUSAR) and $50,000 to Ocean Networks to gather data sets related to tsunami
mapping and earthquake monitoring
ƕ $5 million to Ocean Networks Canada to increase the development and use of
earthquake early warning systems
Ministry of Health:
ƕ $3.9 billion of new construction and upgrades in high risk seismic zones
ƕ $2.9 billion for capital projects throughout the Province over the next three years ʹ
with all new construction built to current seismic standards
Ministry of Education:
ƕ $1.12 billion to replace or upgrade 153 schools
ƕ $560 million over the next three years for upgrades on high risk seismic schools
Exercise Coastal Response
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Exercise Coastal Response is based on a magnitude 9.0 earthquake occurring off the
shore of Southwestern B.C. as a result of a rupture of the Cascadia Subduction Zone. The
earthquake scenario will generate a tsunami impacting the west coast of Vancouver
Island minutes after the initial shock.
The exercise brings together key stakeholder groups such as different levels of
government, provincial ministries, First Nations, Crown corporations, non-government
organizations and first responders.
The exercise is a mix of real-time activities and simulated situations involving functions
such as emergency operations, logistics, medical care, mass care, public information and
operational communications.
Exercise Pacific Quake
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Exercise Pacific Quake is a Canadian federal government earthquake exercise. Federal
exercise play will include the local federal coordination departments who have a
presence in the lower mainland and Vancouver Island, such as Canadian Coast Guard,
Transport Canada, Public Health Agency of Canada, and will extend to the Government
Operations Centre in Ottawa.
Exercise Staunch Maple
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The Joint Task Force Pacific (JTFP), the lead Canadian military formation in B.C., have a
range of activities planned, some of which are linked to Exercise Coastal Response
activities located along the west coast of Vancouver Island.
Exercise Cascadia Rising
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Led by Northwest United States FEMA Region 10, this exercise includes municipalities
and counties in the Western half of Washington and Oregon, as well as parts of Idaho.
Learn More:
Exercise Coastal Response: http://ow.ly/7e6o300baWH
BC Earthquake Immediate Response Plan: http://ow.ly/4nrclv
PreparedBC: http://www2.gov.bc.ca/preparedbc
Basic emergency kit supplies: http://ow.ly/4nrcp3
Household preparedness and neighbourhood preparedness guides: http://ow.ly/4nrcso
Prepare Your Pets Guide: http://ow.ly/4nrcwG
Emergency Info BC, B.C.͛s official channel for emergency alerts: http://ow.ly/WCDbj
Follow on Twitter: @EmergencyInfoBC and @PreparedBC
Media Contact:
Media Relations
Government Communications and Public
Engagement
Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure
250 356-8241
Connect with the Province of B.C. at: www.gov.bc.ca/connect