7.0 earthquake prompts O.C. tsunami alert
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Andrew Edwards
A tsunami warning along the West Coast came and went Tuesday night,
giving emergency responders a chance to prepare for a disaster that
did not come.
“We geared up like we would like we would for any disaster and
were prepared to take action,” Newport Beach Fire Department
Battalion Chief Dave Mais said.
Neither Mais nor Newport Beach Police Lt. Jim Kaminsky said they
could recall a previous tsunami warning in Newport Beach. The
departments’ disaster training programs include preparation for
tsunamis, they said.
“We train for situations like this all the time,” Mais said.
“That’s the business we’re in.”
Soon after the tsunami warning was issued, lifeguards were ordered
to evacuate Newport’s beaches and piers, Mais said. Police managed
traffic as some people voluntarily evacuated.
“We did get some people leaving, but it was not a logjam or
anything,” Kaminsky said.
The National Weather Service issued a tsunami warning for the West
Coast following an earthquake off the northern California coast. The
U.S. Geological Survey reported the 7.0-magnitude quake happened at
6:50 p.m. with an epicenter 91 miles west-southwest of Crescent City.
The tsunami warning, issued around 8 p.m., was called off at 9:09
p.m.
Kaminsky said he called Mais to begin preparations for a possible
tsunami as soon as he heard about the earthquake.
“As I was calling him he was picking up the phone to call me,”
Kaminsky said.
Police dispatchers estimated they handled about 400 calls related
to the warning, Kaminsky said. Mais said some people came to the two
fire stations on the Balboa Peninsula to seek advice.
“A few people were packing their belongings,” Mais said.
In events like a tsunami warning, people concerned about a
possible disaster do not need to call 911 or public safety agencies
to get information, Sgt. Jim Whitman of the Orange County Sheriff’s
Harbor Patrol said. Whitman said public safety agencies have the same
information available on news broadcasts. He advised people to pay
attention to news updates, and if a tsunami ever looks likely, head
to higher ground.
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District board and the Newport
Beach City Council canceled meetings Tuesday after the tsunami
warning was issued. Newport Beach resident Joy Brenner attended the
meeting despite hearing the alert on her way to City Hall. She was
more concerned about an issue scheduled for the meeting than a
potential disaster.
“I was more worried about my property rights being eroded,” she
said.
Like Brenner, diners at 21 Oceanfront Restaurant on the Balboa
Peninsula were not frightened by the warning.
“They just decided to have extra drinks,” general manager Mark
Lamb said.
-- Daily Pilot staff writers Alicia Robinson and Michael Miller
contributed to this report.
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at andrew.edwards
@latimes.com.
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