MEDIA RELEASE
CIVIL AIR PATROL NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS

last modified: Tuesday, January 18, 2005

original release date:
1/7/05

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tsunami preparedness part of Civil Air Patrol training
MAXWELL AFB, Ala. — The idea of tsunami preparedness is nothing new for Civil Air Patrol members in Hawaii.

In the aftermath of the recent devastating tsunami in Asia and East Africa, CAP’s Hawaii Wing has scheduled additional exercises to supplement its usual tsunami preparedness training.

“Our wing works extensively with the Hawaii Civil Defense to provide early warning and damage assessment,” said CAP Lt. Col. Anthony R. Schena, of Ewa Beach, Hawaii.  “Early warning is the best defense against loss of life.”

CAP maintains aircraft on each of the Hawaiian islands, and can fly pre-determined routes with sirens and power amplifiers to transmit warnings in the event of an impending disaster. They can also deliver medical supplies, transport emergency response officials, and assist in radio communications.

Hawaii CAP members also receive training from local meteorologists and members of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). These computer-based “table-top” exercises require that CAP members respond to a variety of simulated disaster scenarios, testing their response time and effectiveness. 

Residents of Hawaii know all too well that a tsunami can strike close to home. In 1946, a tsunami that originated from an earthquake in the Aleutian Islands struck without warning, killing more than 100 people. Hawaii was struck again in 1960 by a tsunami that traveled hundreds of miles from the coast of Chile.

Since then, the state of Hawaii has established various agencies, including CAP, in a Civil Defense team that includes law enforcement and emergency responders, the American Red Cross, and many of the islands’ hotels.

Schena says Hawaii is not the only state vulnerable to tsunami. The U.S. West Coast lies along the Pacific Basin, a zone of frequent earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. When such geographic disturbances occur in the ocean, they can displace massive amounts of water capable of moving at more than 500 miles per hour before reaching the shore.

CAP’s Alaska Wing also maintains a disaster response training program that can be used in the event of a tsunami.

“We need only watch the news each night to see the devastating effects of this recent tsunami,” said Maj. Gen. Dwight Wheless, CAP’s national commander. “The toll this disaster has taken on so many innocent people just reinforces the importance of strengthening our warning and emergency response systems in vulnerable areas here at home.

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Media Inquiries:

Melanie LeMay

Public Relations Specialist
National Headquarters Civil Air Patrol
334.953.5320
334.953.4245 fax
mlemay@cap.gov