June 7-10, 2016 Emergency Operations and Coordination Centers (EOC/ECCs) at all levels of government and the private sector will activate to conduct a simulated field response operation within their jurisdictions and with neighboring communities, state EOCs, FEMA, and major military commands.
Conducting successful life-saving and life-sustaining response operations in the aftermath of a Cascadia Subduction Zone disaster will hinge on the effective coordination and integration of governments at all levels – cities, counties, state agencies, federal officials, the military, tribal nations – as well as non-government organizations and the private sector. One of the primary goals of Cascadia Rising is to train and test this whole community approach to complex disaster operations together as a joint team.
Recent subduction zone earthquakes around the world underscore the catastrophic impacts we will face when the next CSZ earthquake and tsunami occurs in our region:
- Indonesia (2004): M9.1 --- 228,000 fatalities
- Chile (2010): M8.8 --- 500 fatalities
- Japan (2011): M9.0 --- 18,000 fatalities
The
Cascadia Subduction Zone off the coast of North America spans from
northern California to southern British Columbia. This subduction zone
can produce earthquakes as large as magnitude 9 and corresponding
tsunamis. Scientific evidence indicates that a magnitude 8.0-9.0
earthquake occurs along the 800-mile long fault on average once every
200 to 500 years. The last major earthquake and tsunami along the fault
occurred over 300 years ago in 1700. Download Original
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