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Cascadia Deep Earthquakes
Cascadia Subduction Zone Earthquakes: A magnitude 9.0 earthquake scenario
Post-Disaster Recovery Guide: How to Guide
Just-in-Time Inventory: Effects on Earthquake Recovery
Using the CREW scenario: Three tabletop exercises
Business Survival Kit For Earthquakes & Other Disasters Video
 
Publications

Post-Disaster Recovery Planning Forum: How-To Guide

bullet Cannon Beach Post-Disaster Recovery Planning Forum Summary Report

After Action Report West Coast Tsunami Warning June 14, 2005

Mitigating the Risk from Coastal Hazards: Strategies & Concepts for Recovery from the December 26, 2004 Tsunami

Local Quake Could Cause $33 Billion in Damage

Cascadia Subduction Zone Earthquakes: A magnitude 9.0 earthquake scenario

"Just-in-time" Inventories and Other Disaster Management Challenges in the Seattle Metropolitan Area

Effects of the 2001 Nisqually earthquake on small businesses in Washington state

Did the Nisqually Earthquake Cause Change Within the Business Community?

Living with Earthquakes in the Pacific Northwest

Lessons Learned Over Time

"No' Exposure", the newsletter of the Association of Contingency Planners, Washington chapter

Discussion Paper: "Addressing Cascadia Earthquake Risks"


Publications

Post-Disaster Recovery Planning Forum: How-To Guide
This guide, prepared by CREW and the Partnership for Disaster Resilience, provides an approach for assisting communities in identifying issues they will face after a disaster. The intent is to provide a process for communities to start pre-disaster planning for catastrophic events by engaging partners in identifying the critical issues the community will face in a post-disaster reconstruction environment. This is only the first step towards making your community more disaster resilient and sustainable - now and for the future. The guide was developed to complement the Cascadia Region Earthquake Workgroup (CREW) Cascadia Scenario, however, it can be used by any community to address any type of catastrophic disaster.

Cannon Beach Post-Disaster Recovery Planning Forum Summary Report
The events of the 2004 Sumatra earthquake and tsunami as well as Hurricane Katrina in 2005 have proven that most communities are ill-prepared to undertake the long-term post-disaster recovery and reconstruction efforts necessary to bring a community back to normal following a catastrophic event. The importance of this issue to coastal communities in the Pacific Northwest is heightened due to its location along the Cascadia Subduction Zone where the Juan de Fuca plate meets the North American plate. Earthquakes generated along this 800 mile fault have far more widespread effects than other types of quakes in the region and have the potential to result in catastrophic impacts on coastal communities due to the generation of local tsunamis.

After Action Report West Coast Tsunami Warning June 14, 2005
The magnitude 7.2 (preliminary magnitude 7.4) earthquake and Tsunami Warning issued for the West Coast of the United States on June 14, 2005, serves as a credible test of readiness for emergency officials in interpreting and communicating critical information and enacting emergency operations to protect the welfare of the residents and visitors along the Oregon coast.This After Action Report from Oregon Emergency Management examines the timelines of the events on June 14, the critical components of emergency operations involved in receiving and issuing tsunami warnings and evacuations, and puts forward ten findings with recommended actions to improve or refine existing operations that will mitigate future losses during the next inevitable Oregon tsunami.

Mitigating the Risk from Coastal Hazards: Strategies & Concepts for Recovery from the December 26, 2004 Tsunami
This report presents strategies, concepts and options for the recovery and redevelopment of areas damaged by the December 26, 2004 tsunami. Particular emphasis is placed on the use of scientifically based hazard mitigation measures for siting and construction in conjunction with flexible implementation strategies in the land use and construction process. It is believed that the technically based standards will protect the public to a greater degree from future flooding and wave events, while the flexible strategies will ease and expedite implementation and overall recovery. From a technical standpoint, methods for dividing the tsunami inundation zone into subzones are introduced. Within the subzones, appropriate multi-hazard mitigation measures are presented. Recurrence interval considerations are discussed, as well as strategies to adjust the construction and siting standards based on the interval. In chapters 3 to 5, concepts and strategies to assist implementation of the technically based standards are presented to assist the short-term and long-term recovery of tsunami stricken areas.

Local Quake Could Cause $33 Billion in Damage
Jacqueline Meszaros, a University of Washington professor, has published research on the disastrous effects the regional economy will suffer in the event of a magnitude 6.7 earthquake along the Seattle Fault, which runs through Hood Canal in the west, across the Puget Sound and south Seattle, and into Bellevue and Issaquah.

Cascadia Subduction Zone Earthquakes: A magnitude 9.0 earthquake scenario )
Read our new publication about the effects of a major subduction earthquake on communities along the Cascadia Subduction Zone, stretching from the Brooks Peninsula on Vancouver Island to Cape Mendocino in northern California. (PDF document is 34 MB).


"Just-in-time" Inventories and Other Disaster Management Challenges in the Seattle Metropolitan Area
Bob Freitag, CREW Executive Director examines the possible effects of "just-in-time" management strategies on post-earthquake recovery in the Seattle area.


Effects of the 2001 Nisqually earthquake on small businesses in Washington state
Jacqueline Meszaros of the University of Washington, Bothell, and Mark Fiegener of the University of Washington, Tacoma examine the impact that the 2001 Nisqually earthquake had on businesses throughout the Puget Sound region.



Did the Nisqually Earthquake Cause Change Within the Business Community?
Bob Freitag, CREW Executive Director examines some main lessons learned from the Cascadia Regional Earthquake Workgroup (CREW) conference held on November 27th and 28th, 2001.

Living with Earthquakes in the Pacific Northwest
Robert Yeats, a professor emeritus of geology at Oregon State University, warns that the Pacific Northwest is facing a catastrophe that could cause thousands of fatalities and tens of billions of dollars of damage, an Oregon State University expert says-and despite some progress made in the last few years to prepare for this, a majority of people still don't seem to care. Read the full review...


Lessons Learned Over Time
This publication consists of the following three retrospective studies of past earthquakes:
1) "Earthquake as Opportunity: The Reconstruction of Pacific Garden Mall, Santa Cruz, After the Loma Prieta Earthquake of 1989"
2) "Empowering Local Governments in Disaster Recovery Management: Lessons from Watsonville and Oakland in Recovering from the 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake and Other Recent Disasters"
3) "Reexamining the Performance of Roll-Up Garage Doors in Fire Stations in Recent California Earthquakes"
Ordering information is available...


"No' Exposure", the newsletter of the Association of Contingency Planners, Washington chapter, is on-line at:
http://www.acp-wa-state.org/Newsletter/NEWSLTR.html


Discussion Paper: "Addressing Cascadia Earthquake Risks", September 1992, Peter J. May & Linda L. Noson.
[quakecas.doc] - Microsoft Word 6.0 File, 44K


Interested in Submitting a paper or publication? Submit your paper or publication to Bob Freitag; once reviewed, they may be posted, at CREW's discretion.

NOTE: The contents of the papers presented here are intented to foster open discussion ONLY and are not endorsed by the Cascadia Region Earthquake Workgroup.