Pase 10 ____________________________î l ! f ^ o r f l a t t h © b s e r ü e r ____________________________ M arch 20.2013 Prepsfor Disaster photo by C ari H achmann /T he P ortland O bserver Michael Wieber, owner of NW Seismic, shows what works and what doesn’t when it comes to seismically retrofitting homes to withstand damages from a major earthquake, such as bolting a home to its foundation to resist lateral shifting. c o n t i n u e d f r o m fron t With more time to focus on his house, Moro did some homework before investing. He researched seismic retrofitting compa­ nies in California, where earthquakes are more prominent, to compare technique and equipment standards with those in Oregon. He chose NW Seismic, a seismic retrofit­ ting company based in Portland that bolts steel side plates or UFP10’s between a home’s concrete foundation and the floor or wall framing to resist lateral shifting during an earthquake. NW Seismic Owner Michael Wieber said many older homes, which are a majority in Portland, are not bolted to their homes ad­ equately and floor systems aren’t attached to the walls beneath them securely enough. And some contractors, he said, have been installing the wrong hardware for years in­ cluding the Simpson FJA, which are panel supports designed to resist uplift, but aren’t strong enough to handle the load an earth­ quake will produce. “While the hardware is great in the event o f a hurricane— it is essentially useless in an earthquake,” said Wieber, who established NW Seismic in 2009. The shift plates are able to resist up to 1,340 pounds of lateral shifting, he said, while panel supports used for uplift only resist 185 pounds. W ieber said M oro’s house is “a typical Portland house” meaning its foundation has full-height concrete walls. With an unfin­ ished basement, it is easier and less costly for his crew to install the retrofit hardware, which costs around $2,000. Drilling 32 steel shift plates, eight on each basement wall, they finished M oro’s home in one full day. For an additional cost, the company also installed a gas shut-off valve system, the Northridge M75, which activates and turns the gas off when there is a certain amount of ground shaking. M oro, who rem odeled his kitchen and dining room before going through with the seism ic retrofit, said he has put a lot o f tim e and m oney in his home. He called the seism ic retrofit a cost effective fix that should have been done when the house was built in 1913. T he em erg en cy b u reau and the P o rt­ lan d B ureau o f D ev elo p m en t S ervices w ill c o n tin u e a se ries o f c la sse s on seism ically upgrading hom es at 7:30 p.m. o n T h u r s d a y , M a r c h 21 a t th e M u ltn o m ah C o unty A rts C en ter, 7688 S.W . C ap ito l Hw y. Monster Quake Would be Devastating 10,000 deaths and billions in economic damage possible (AP) — M ore than 10,000 people could die when — not if — a m onster earthquake and tsunam i occur ju st off the Pacific N orthw est coast, researchers told Oregon legislators Thursday. C oastal tow ns w ould be inundated. Schools, buildings and bridges would col­ lapse, and econom ic dam age could hit $32 billion. These findings were published in a chill­ ing new report by the Oregon Seism ic Safety Policy A dvisory Com m ission, a group o f m ore than 150 volunteer experts. In 2011, the Legislature authorized the study o f what w ould happen if a quake and tsunami such as the one that devastated Japan hit the Pacific Northwest. The C ascadia Subduction Zone, ju st o ff the regional coastline, produced a m ega-quake in the year 1700. Seism ic ex­ perts say another m onster quake and tsu ­ nami are overdue. "This earthquake will hit us again," Kent Yu, an engineer and chairm an o f the com ­ m ission, told law m akers. "It's ju st a m atter o f how soon." W hen it hits, the report says, there will be devastation and death from N orthern C alifornia to British Columbia. M any Oregon com m unities will be left w ithout water, power, heat and telephone service. G asoline supplies will be dis­ rupted. The 2011 Japan quake and tsunami were a wakeup call for the Pacific Northwest. G overnm ents have been taking a closer look at w hether the region is preparecffor som ething sim ilar and discovering it is not. Oregon legislators requested the study so they could better inform them selves about what needs to be done to prepare and recover from such a giant natural disaster. The report says that geologically, O r­ egon and Japan are m irror images. Despite the devastation in Japan, that country was m ore prepared than Oregon because it had spent billions on technology to reduce the dam age, the report says.