A3 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JULY 30, 2019 Scientists warn Oregon is lagging in disaster preparedness By SARAH ZIMMERMAN Associated Press SALEM — Oregon state lawmakers abandoned a multimillion-dollar proj- ect to develop early warn- ing systems for earthquakes and wildfi res, and scien- tists warn that the funding shake-up could endanger public safety and put Ore- gon further behind other West Coast states in prepar- ing for natural disasters. Researchers were shocked when nearly $12 million to expand Shake- Alert and AlertWildfi re — early warning systems to help detect signifi cant earth- quakes and wildfi res — unexpectedly went up in smoke last month, just days before the end of the legis- lative 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 wild- fi re season. And two mas- sive earthquakes in remote areas of Southern Califor- nia this month reminded the public it’s only a matter of time before the next destruc- tive quake hits. “We don’t know when the next big earthquake or wildfi re will strike, but we know it will happen at some point,” said Doug- las 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 disap- pointments” of this year’s Andy Nelson/The Register-Guard A helicopter heads back to a water source to get more water to dump on a wildfi re in May near the Dorena Grange near Cottage Grove. legislative session. ShakeAlert and Aler- tWildfi re are designed to detect natural disasters as they start and alert respond- ers and the public before signifi cant damage occurs. They are managed by a con- sortium of public univer- sities and funded through state, federal and private partnerships. In Oregon, the programs are in the initial phases and need signifi cant state invest- ments to expand to a point that they’ll be useful to the public, Toomey said. AlertWildfi re is a sys- tem of cameras stationed in some of the most remote and fi re-prone parts of Ore- gon, Nevada and California. It has provided critical infor- mation to fi rst responders in over 600 fi res during the past three fi re seasons, allowing fi refi ghters in some cases to contain blazes before they spiral out of control. ShakeAlert, meanwhile, is a sensor system being built out across Califor- nia, Oregon and Washing- ton. The sensors pick up on faster-moving but less-dam- aging energy waves that emerge during the start of an earthquake. They can then sound the alarm before the stronger, more destruc- tive secondary wave, giv- ing people seconds or min- utes to prepare depending on the size of the earthquake and their distance from the epicenter. Other Western states have thrown signifi cant cash behind the two systems, allowing them to build out hundreds of earthquake sen- sors and wildfi re cameras. Cities and states need at least 75% of their earth- quake sensors in place before offi cials can begin alerting the public through the ShakeAlert app. Los Angeles became the fi rst U.S. city to make the app available in January. The system could be send- ing alerts to the rest of Cal- ifornia by the end of the year thanks to a $16.3 mil- lion investment from state lawmakers. Additional emergency management funds also have allowed California to expand its use of AlertWild- fi re, and the state is expected to install 200 to 300 new wildfi re cameras by October. Washington’s ShakeAlert system could be ready by October 2020, and the state to the offi ce of Sen. Eliza- beth Steiner Hayward, who chairs the legislative com- mittee in charge of funding decisions. Lizzy Atwood Wills, chief of staff to Steiner Hay- ward, said ShakeAlert and AlertWildfi re were some of the many projects not to receive funding this year. Investments are prioritized “within the limited resources available,” she said. Toomey said he still doesn’t understand why it wasn’t considered a pri- ority, saying the money would have created jobs and attracted additional federal matching funds besides pos- sibly saving lives. “It feels like the state is demoting public safety,” he said. “There are lives at stake here.” contributed $1 million this year to enhance the network. Meanwhile, only three wildfi re cameras have been installed in Oregon, and the state still has to build over 100 more earthquake sen- sors before alerts can be sent through ShakeAlert. Without any additional money from the state, ShakeAlert will remain dependent on federal funds. That could mean the system won’t be online until 2021 at the earliest — far later than Oregon’s neighboring states. State lawmakers didn’t specify why funding for ShakeAlert and AlertWild- fi re was abandoned, but it’s common for last-min- ute funding shake-ups to happen based on avail- able resources, according Enter for a chance to WIN A TRIP TO HAWAII * EVERY DAY Card not required in Albertsons When you buy 3 or more participating items and receive a code to enter through 8/13/19 Participating Item Look for participating item tags *NO PURCHASE NECESSARY to enter or win. Open to legal U.S. residents, residing in Oregon or SW Washington, 18 years and older (must be 21+ to purchase alcohol). 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