Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Experts Urge Canadians To Take Part In Earthquake Drill Oct. 15

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Oct, 2015 10:49 AM
    MONTREAL — Get ready for the Great Shakeout.
     
    On Thursday, drills in British Columbia and Quebec will provide people with the opportunity to learn how to be safer during earthquakes.
     
    B.C. organizers say 750,000 people have registered for that province's  event, which will see participants drop to the ground at 10:15 a.m. local time, take cover by getting under a table or desk and hold on for about 60 to 90 seconds.
     
    The exercise, which happens yearly on the third Thursday in October, was first held in British Columbia in 2011.
     
    Alison Bird, a seismologist with Natural Resources Canada, is urging Canadians to take steps to prepare for an earthquake  — not just in southwestern B.C. where there's a high risk  — but across the country.
     
    Bird says some groups in Ontario will also be doing the drill, but it is not provincewide.  
     
    She stresses the worst thing a person can do is to run through a building when a quake hits.
     
    "When you're in a stressful situation your brain is not functioning properly so your body wants to do the instinctive thing, which is to run," she said, adding that the most dangerous place to be is just around the outside of a building.
     
    Bird says people need to be taught to drop, find cover and hold on if an earthquake hits.
     
    "It's really important to create that muscle memory so that you do the right thing in an earthquake," she said.  
     
    Over the centuries, earthquakes in Canada have claimed at least 30 lives, with most of them victims of a tsunami that hit Newfoundland in 1929.
     
    People living on Moresby Island, off the B.C. mainland, have been coping with their share of earthquakes over the years.
     
    Bill Beldessi, the director of Moresby Island regional district, remembers the 2012 quake in the Haida Gwaii region that measured 7.8 on the Richter scale.
     
    "It was probably one of the worst one since I've lived here," he said in an interview from Sandspit, B.C.
     
    "I was in bed and I noticed the light fixtures started making noises and a few things dropped off the wall and then a couple of aftershocks happened within five minutes."
     
    Beldessi, 66, says everyone headed for higher ground.
     
     
    That threat of massive tidal waves also prompted the community to pull together and set up an emergency centre.
     
    "That's what we're doing right now,'' he said. ''We have a tsunami centre up in the hills and it's full stocked.
     
    "As far as the big one, who knows when it's going to come — we don't lay awake worrying about it.
     
    "We constantly have earth tremors here so it's not a big deal when we get something around three-and-a half or (magnitude) four. It's normal."
     
    Bird says people living in Victoria have a one-in-three chance of experiencing a damaging earthquake over the next 50 years.
     
    For Vancouver, there's a one-in-five chance.   
     
    The danger is lower in the B.C. Interior, but Bird cautions ''there's nowhere that has zero hazard for earthquakes."
     
    The hazard decreases further inland and while provinces like Saskatchewan and Manitoba can experience quakes, the threat there is low.
     
    Bird says there are approximately 4,000 earthquakes a year in the West and about another 2,000 in the East.
     
    "So it's a very active country for earthquakes. . . we really have to try to get people to recognize that that's the case."
     
    Her colleague, Maurice Lamontagne, who monitors Eastern Canada, says there are three active seismic zones in Quebec.
     
    He says 60 earthquakes are registered yearly in the west Quebec region, which includes the Laurentians, Montreal, Ottawa and eastern Ontario. 
     
    Another seismic zone is the Charlevoix region northeast of Quebec City where two children died in an 1866 quake.
     
    The third seismic zone in Quebec is the Lower St-Lawrence region and Lamontagne says it's mainly under the river that the 60 yearly quakes are produced.
     
    The seismologist adds that neighbouring New Brunswick has had its share of quakes and continues to register small ones.
     
    Lamontagne warns there could be a repeat of the 7.2 earthquake off the Grand Banks of Newfoundland that was followed by a tsunami. It killed 28 people as waves carried away several villages in the Burin Peninsula.
     
     
    "Absolutely!, there could be earthquakes that could cause tsunamis like that one," he said in an interview.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Opposition Parties Warn Sale Of Hydro One Will Drive Electricity Rates Higher

    The Progressive Conservatives and the New Democrats are opposed to the sale of Hydro One, warning it will lead to higher electricity prices.

    Opposition Parties Warn Sale Of Hydro One Will Drive Electricity Rates Higher

    Guy Turcotte, Quebec Doctor Set To Stand Trial A Second Time In The Deaths Of His Two Children

    Jury selection is set to begin Monday in the second trial of a former Quebec cardiologist who is charged with first-degree murder in the slayings of his two children.

    Guy Turcotte, Quebec Doctor Set To Stand Trial A Second Time In The Deaths Of His Two Children

    Deadline Approaches For Toronto To Declare Interest In Bidding For Olympics 2024

    The premier of Ontario says she hasn't decided whether her government will support an Olympic bid by the city of Toronto if one is made.

    Deadline Approaches For Toronto To Declare Interest In Bidding For Olympics 2024

    Groups To Protest Removal Of Historic Ruins Near Montreal Highway Construction Site

    Groups To Protest Removal Of Historic Ruins Near Montreal Highway Construction Site
    Archeologists unearthed the ruins of the former village earlier this summer. 

    Groups To Protest Removal Of Historic Ruins Near Montreal Highway Construction Site

    Former Harper Aide Bruce Carson Pleads Not Guilty To Influence Peddling

    Bruce Carson is charged in connection with the proposed sale of water purification systems to First Nations communities.

    Former Harper Aide Bruce Carson Pleads Not Guilty To Influence Peddling

    Federal Government Balances Books One Year Early, Posts Surprise $1.9 Billion Surplus

    The number ends a streak of six deficits under the Conservatives and is certain to reverberate on the campaign trail.

    Federal Government Balances Books One Year Early, Posts Surprise $1.9 Billion Surplus