Tsunami alert tests West Coast readiness, with mixed results - Action News
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British Columbia

Tsunami alert tests West Coast readiness, with mixed results

Door-to-door warnings, sirens, texts roused many Vancouver Island residents at risk but not all.

Many Victoria residents slept through phone alerts urging them to move to high ground

A couple walk along Whiffin Spit following a tsunami warning in Sooke, B.C., on Jan. 23. Tsunami warning sirens went off in Tofino and other coastal communities on British Columbia's west coast Tuesday morning after a powerful earthquake struck off Alaska. (Chad Hipolito/The Canadian Press)

Are you ready for a tsunami?

When the emergency alert came early Tuesday morning, through a mishmash of text alerts, sirens, phone calls from faraway relatives or a knock on the door, West Coast residents' responses ranged from rolling over in bed to heading for anearby peak.

For residents and designatedemergency responders, the warning of an approaching tsunami later cancelled was a sobering reality check about our state of readiness for an event that will give hoursor, in some cases,minutes to scramble to safety.

At the top of Victoria's Mount Tolmie (elevation 120 metres) shortly after the first tsunami alert at 2:41,CBC associate producer Nicole Crescenzi found a full parking lot and a crowd of hundreds peering into the darkness towards the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

One young man was busy calling his mother to let him know he was safe.One womanhad called friends to alert them, and worried about the ones that didn't answer. Another brought hergrab-and-go earthquakekit.

One woman brought the medical supplies she needed forregular dialysis treatment.

Rolled over and went back to sleep

Meg Devlin, who lives near Victoria's Gorge waterfront, said she was awakened by a message at 3:02 but didn't recognize the phone number for Victoria's Vic-Alert emergency notification service, so she ignored it.

"I unplugged my phone and rolled over and went back to sleep," Devlin told On the Island host Gregor Craigie.

She only learned of the tsunami alert when she woke at 4:30, after the alertwas cancelled.

Many Vancouver Island residents first learned from friends and relatives as far away as Antigua and England that a 7.9-magnitude earthquake in the Gulf of Alaska had triggered a tsunami alert for the west coast of British Columbia.

Meanwhile, many of the Victoria residents in coastal neighbourhoods who had signed up for Vic-Alertweren't alerted,because they had silenced or turned off their phones.

Tanya Patterson, the City of Victoria's emergency program coordinator, said the Vic-Alert systemis one area for improvement in the city's emergency response.

The tsunami alerts werespecificallytargetedto subscribersin neighbourhoods with coastal exposure.

But the 6,400 subscribers can't program their phones to ring through with a Vic-Alert text or voice message iftheir phone's turned off, because they aresent out from multiplephone numbers.

Patterson said Canadian telecom regulations prohibit push alerts like the ones used in Hawaiiwhere every cellphone in an at-risk area receives alerts for a potential tsunami or incoming missiles. She said discussions are underway to try to change that.

The experience was particularly rattling for those living near sea level, such as James Bay houseboat dweller Margo Goodhandwho was notified by a neighbour's knock on the door at 3:30 a.m.

Irene Lockwood, whose waterfront View Royal home is also near sea level, criticizedthe lack of a warning siren inthe Victoria suburb.Fearing a stranger, she hesitated to answer a knock onthe door around 4:30 Tuesday morning, which turned out to bea firefighter.

By the time she followed instructions to gather her pet and leave, the warning was cancelled.

A few kilometres further west along the waterfront in Metchosin, Pearson College principalDsireMcGraw said students and staff passed the test with flying colours. By 3:50 a.m. the 180students in residence had all beenawakened and efficiently marshalledto higher ground.


With files from Megan Thomas, Emily Brass, and CBCRadio One On the Island