It’s Not If. . . Its When! Will Oregon be Ready for the Megaquake?

A magnitude 9.0 earthquake off the Northwest coast could hit at any time along the Oregon Coast. How can we prepare for this impending and unpredictable disaster?

Three times in three years Jay Wilson has returned to Kadonowaki, Japan. Each time, the weeds are a little bit taller, the concrete foundations are a little more weathered.

On March 11, 2011, a tsunami scraped a vast swath of this town from the earth. Homes and businesses were reduced to rubble. A rebuilt paper mill is among the few structures resurrected here after the disaster.

As Wilson surveys the landscape, it’s hard to know whether he’s more rattled by this tsunami that has happened, or the tsunami that will happen — in Oregon.

Oregon faces the threat of an earthquake every bit as large as the one that struck Japan. Are there lessons we can learn from Japan’s experience? Can we prepare for something so destructive? [learn more]

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Meet our Students: Sarah Allison / Community and Regional Planning

Meet our Students: Sarah Allison

Community and Regional Planning

What city, region, state do you call home?

Oregon

In which graduate program are you enrolled?

Community and Regional Planning

What is your area of concentration?

I am focused on the strengthening of geographic communities through hazards planning and socio-economic development.

What will you be doing for the Community Service Center?

I will be helping to develop a Strategic Plan for the Emergency Management Departments of Douglas County and Coos County, and a Regional Strategic Action Plan for how they can work together to better accomplish their goals.

How does your involvement with the Community Service Center (CSC) relate to or inform your graduate studies?

My project with the CSC looks at the organizational needs of planning for hazards and emergencies of all kinds. Hazards planning is one of the focuses of my graduate studies because of the inherently local nature of hazards, and the ability of the issue to bring communities together.

What can you say about the value of your Community Service Center experience?

This project not only gives me a greater understanding of the challenges of emergency management, it also offers real world experience with the political realities of how change is made, and a broader view of the strategies needed to plan for that change. I gain a great deal from the experience of actually doing (rather than simply studying the relevant theory), and hopefully make a difference on the ground at the same time.

What outcome are you hoping for when your project ends?

I hope to deliver a plan that the county can take ownership of and implement because it serves their goals in a way that feels authentic to them.

More about the Community Planning Workshop(CPW)