TALES
OF OREGON'S TSUNAMI SCARE
More than an exercise in public safety,
June's tsunami scare was a collection of heroics, mistakes,
humor and lessons learned.
By Andre Hagestedt
If
you ever needed something to drive it into your head about the
potential dangers of Oregon's geology, this past June was it.
That night, around 7:30 p.m., an undersea earthquake rattled
about 90 miles off the Northern California coast - the right
magnitude to create a fairly nasty tsunami, but luckily the
dynamics were different. Nothing arrived, and the whole thing
was called off within 20 minutes in most places.
Luck, indeed. Next time may not be so nice.
The result was a series of warnings and watches
for a tsunami all up and down Oregon's shoreline, with officials
taking little chances and hitting the sirens to cue folks to
head for the hills.
By all accounts, it didn't go badly most of the
time. But as Seaside's Mike Exinger put it: "Depending
on whom you talk to, it either went really well, OK, or it sucked."
Sirens shot off in Seaside, Cannon Beach, Manzanita,
Rockaway, Pacific City, Neskowin, Waldport and Yachats, but
apparently spots like Gleneden Beach (just south of Lincoln
City), Depoe Bay and Lincoln City got no warning noises. Meanwhile,
Newport - which has no sirens - is generally high enough that
officials only evacuated low-lying beaches. Lincoln City officials
tried to fire off the sirens, but they were defective and didn't
make a peep.
Valerie DiBlasi, co-owner of Depoe Bay-area restaurant
Italian Riviera, wasn't happy about the lack of warning.
"We found out through one of our employees'
mothers," DiBlasi said. "She called the restaurant
about 20 minutes into the warning. Our restaurant and all of
us could have been under water by then."
Lori Fowler, of Depoe Bay, noticed her family
rabbits doing something strange. Without cable TV or being near
the bay, she heard nothing of it until later in the evening.
Lucy Gibson, of the Oregon Coast Visitors Association
in Newport, was one of those who zipped out onto the beaches
on an ATV to warn people. "What did shock me, though, were
the number of people that had packed into Yaquina Bay State
Park," she said. "Looking up there from the beach,
I could not believe the sheer number of people who were lined
up along the viewpoints. Don't these folks realize they needed
to get away from the water's edge - not run to it?"
In Seaside, The Seaside Convention Center Inn's
Heather Wadkins said her guests took the evacuation in stride
- for the most part. She also watched what she called the "helpful
spirit of strangers" with some assisting others, especially
the elderly.
Gary Turel, of Seaside Helicopters, called it
"an interesting evening."
"I took the helicopter up to watch the event
unfold and confirm no big waves inbound - not that I could have
stopped one," Turel said. "The evacuation routes were
packed. The east to the mountains seemed a little plugged, but
101 south, out of town, seemed to move more quickly."
In
Cannon Beach, humor seemed to pepper the event for many. One
spokesperson for the Chamber of Commerce said: "I think
for every two people there was a dog - which was so Cannon Beach."
The Van Buren Lighthouse Inn's Nikkol Nagle had
never seen such an evacuation and said she was rather awed by
the whole thing. She escaped to somewhere just up Highway 26.
"My whole neighborhood ended up being there - most veterans
to the tsunami evacuation process," Nagle said. "They
weren't worried too much and it was great that several of them
had been through this all before. They said after the tsunami
hit in the 60's, Cannon Beach had evacuations all the time.
"A little time had past and three cars full
of 20-something Australian travelers pulled over to find out
what was going on. Once they knew it was a tsunami alert they
pulled out the lawn chairs and malt beverages and made a date
out of it."
In the Nehalem Bay area, the San Dune Inn's Brian
Hines lamented the fact it hit just as he was getting ready
to visit the bathroom. He and his wife Billie grabbed the three
dogs and drove up the hill to the viewpoints on Neahkahnie.
On their way, they realized they'd left the stove on and zipped
back to take care of that.
"101 was a shambles and cars were parked
bumper to bumper at the overlooks. People with video cameras
had them pointed out to sea," he said.
Everyone seemed to learn something, however -
especially the need for creating emergency kits. Hines, Nagle
and Tillamook County tourism official Jill Brewer - a Manzanita
resident - echoed the same sentiment.
"I think I'll go home and get my emergency
kit together and maybe look at some other city's tsunami maps,"
said Brewer. Her roommate is Darci Connor, who was until recently
Seaside's tsunami education coordinator, whom Seaside mayor
Don Larson had enormous praise for after the event.
Not everyone learned something or took it too
seriously, however. Reports abounded of some running towards
the beach to check things out. Then there's Wheeler businessman
Garry Gitzen, who only heard about it from a friend while in
Nehalem. He took the opportunity to make light of it. "I
came back to Wheeler and stood out on the highway with my kayak
paddle, and paddled and stuck out my thumb," he said. "80
percent of those driving by laughed."