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In the Crosshairs of Cascadia, a City Seeks Shelter From the Waves | Hakai Magazine

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by Laura Dattaro
August 6, 2015 | 700 words, about 3 minutes

This story is over 10 years old.

Westport, Washington, is about as close to being underwater as a city can get. It’s surrounded by water on three sides: the South Bay to the east and the vast Pacific Ocean to the north and west. A land bridge just two kilometers wide connects the town to the mainland. Lurking just offshore, the Cascadia fault threatens to finish the job.

Running 1,130 kilometers from British Columbia to northern California, the Cascadia subduction zone is the fault line where the Juan de Fuca tectonic plate, the seafloor of the northeast Pacific Ocean, is forcing its way beneath North America. Stress is building, the fault is creaking, and one day the fault will rupture, releasing an earthquake of catastrophic proportions. And when it does, low-lying Westport will be in the splash zone of the tsunami that such an earthquake will no doubt spawn. It will take about 20 minutes for the water to wash over the city.

Fortunately for the residents of Westport, there will soon be a place to flee when the ground starts to shake. The city is currently constructing the United States’ first publicly funded tsunami shelter, with enough room to give a square meter of space each to 1,000 people—about half of Westport’s population.

“In the event that there’s really a big tsunami battering the coast, I think people might be willing to squeeze a little tighter,” says Tim Walsh, a geologist with the Washington State Department of Natural Resources who has been working on tsunami safety since the 1990s.

In the early 2000s, Walsh and his colleagues began to investigate if it was even possible to build a structure that could be shaken by a large quake, clobbered by a tsunami, and still “live to tell the tale.”

Work on the concept continued for years, until the 2011 Japanese earthquake and tsunami provided both a wealth of new information and rush of public awareness. In 2013, a plan was proposed to fix Westport’s aging Ocosta Elementary School and, in the process, equip it with a tsunami shelter.

Now, a new school gym is being built on a hill that’s nearly nine meters above sea level, making its roof, at nearly 17 meters elevation, one of the tallest buildings in town. Piles will support the gym from underneath in the event the foundation gives out. Stair towers at the gym’s corners will provide quick access to the roof, where students and residents can wait for the high waters to recede.

Not only will the shelter potentially “save the lives of school kids” says Walsh, it could also protect anyone else who could make it to the school in time. “It’s a real public benefit,” he says.

But at an estimated cost of US $13-million, the shelter is “a pretty significant gesture” for a tiny city with little industry, says Walsh.

It’s a gesture that’s been difficult for other communities to make, if the example of Cannon Beach, Oregon, is any indication. Just 160 kilometers south of Westport, Cannon Beach has been trying—and failing—to get the money to build a tsunami shelter for at least five years, says city planner Mark Barnes.

Cannon Beach is a long, narrow beachfront city just blocks from the Oregon Coast Highway. Almost the entire city, including the city hall and most road and water infrastructure, is in the tsunami inundation zone. That means the shelter will need to be built far from the center, requiring new roads and making construction that much more costly.

The Cannon Beach city council is actively prioritizing a tsunami shelter, Barnes says, but as of now there’s no plan for how to pay for it. Plans for construction are “years off,” Barnes says. It’s fingers crossed that the next big earthquake is years off, too.

Westport, though, will be ready. Work on the site began last November, and the shelter’s expected to be up and ready next year. After that, all that’s left is to wait.

Correction: As a point of clarification, the tsunami shelter is not a project of the City of Westport, Washington, but rather of the Ocosta School District, of which Westport is a part. The US$13 million price tag is the cost of the whole construction project, not just the tsunami shelter itself.

Cite this Article: Laura Dattaro “In the Crosshairs of Cascadia, a City Seeks Shelter From the Waves,” Hakai Magazine, Aug 6, 2015, accessed January 25th, 2026, https://hakaimagazine.com/news/crosshairs-cascadia-city-seeks-shelter-waves/.

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After Helene, rural North Carolina turns to solar and… | Canary Media

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Clean energy journalism for a cooler tomorrow

More than a year after the storm’s devastation, clean-energy microgrids are springing up in remote areas thanks to a program that could become a national model.
An overhead view of winding, muddy river lined by hurricane-damaged houses
An aerial view of flood damage wrought by Hurricane Helene along the Swannanoa River on Oct. 3, 2024, in Asheville, North Carolina (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

The Double Island Volunteer Fire Department in Yancey County, North Carolina, is the beating heart of this remote community in the shadow of Mount Mitchell, about 50 miles northeast of Asheville. Once home to a schoolhouse that doubled as a church, the red-roofed building still hosts weddings, parties, and other events.

It was built to serve as a community center,” said Dan Buchanan, whose family has lived in the area since 1747 and whose mother attended the school as a young girl. A place to gather.”

Sixteen months ago, when Hurricane Helene hit this rugged corner of countryside with catastrophic floods, Double Island’s fire department was where locals turned for help.

This is [our] downtown,’” said Buchanan, who serves as the assistant fire chief. In the wake of the storm, people were like, Let’s get to the fire station.’ That was the goal of everybody.”

Fresh out of retirement and living back in his hometown to care for his ailing mother, Buchanan drew on his long career in emergency response to spring into action. With the station, powered by generators, serving as their command center, he and his neighbors gathered and distributed food, water, and other provisions to those in need. They hacked through downed limbs and sent out search teams.

By the end of the fourth day, we had accounted for all the residents of the Double Island community,” Buchanan said. And while no one in the enclave died because of the hurricane, some suffered while they waited for medications like insulin.

A lack of drinking water and limited forms of communication were also huge obstacles. When we finally got the roads cleared, and people could get in here, we were literally writing down our needs on a notepad and giving it to whomever, and then they would ferry supplies,” Buchanan said. A carrier pigeon would have been nice.”

Helene was a once in 10 lifetimes” storm, Buchanan said, with devastation he and the community hope to never see again. But more extreme weather events are all but certain thanks to climate change, and today Double Island is better prepared.

The station is equipped with a microgrid of 32 solar panels and a pair of four-hour batteries. The donated equipment will shave about $100 off the fire department’s monthly electric bill, meaningful savings for an organization with an annual operating budget of just $51,000.

When storms inevitably hit, felling trees and downing power lines, the self-sustaining microgrid can provide some electricity and an internet signal.

We’ll have at least a way to run our radio equipment, run our well and basic lighting and refrigeration,” Buchanan said, adding that the latter was vital for medication. It may not seem like much — but that’s the Willy Wonka golden ticket.”

Communication, he stressed, was key. If you can’t communicate, you can’t get the help you need.”

The microgrid project, called a resilience hub, was made possible by a network of government and nonprofit groups that came together after Helene to help fire departments like Double Island and other community centers with long-term recovery. Now, a state grant program is injecting a burst of funds into their efforts. Using both public and private time, know-how, and money, the program aims to create a model for resilience that can be replicated nationwide.

We aren’t only preparing for a disaster; we’re also helping utility diversification, cost savings, and normalization of the technology,” said Jamie Trowbridge, a senior program manager at Footprint Project, a leading nonprofit in the initiative. Those benefits aren’t unique to Yancey County, he said. We’d like to see this be a pilot for us on what scalable microgrid technology could be across all of western North Carolina — and maybe the country.”

The Double Island experience was common in the immediate aftermath of Helene. Across the region, communities isolated by closed roads and mountainous terrain turned to their fire departments for help.

That’s part of how Kristin Stroup got involved in the resilience hub effort. Based in Black Mountain, a popular tourist destination 15 miles east of Asheville, Stroup helped start a corps of volunteers who gathered at the town’s visitor center. In coordination with an emergency operations center based at Black Mountain’s main fire station, she led over 200 volunteers in doing whatever they could, from cooking and doling out food to making the country roads passable.

People [were] just driving around the town with chain saws,” said Stroup, today a senior manager in energy and climate resilience with the nonprofit Appalachian Voices. The weekend after Helene hit, she said, Footprint rolled into town with a bunch of solar panels. I became an instant part of their family.”

With founders who cut their teeth in international aid, the New Orleans–based Footprint Project had teamed up with the North Carolina Sustainable Energy Association, Greentech Renewables Raleigh, and others to pool donations of batteries, solar panels, and other equipment to deploy microgrids to dozens of sites in the region before the end of 2024. From Lake Junaluska to Linville Falls, recipients included fire stations such as the one in Double Island and an art collective in West Asheville.

By February 2025, Footprint had hired Trowbridge and another staff person to work in the area permanently. Footprint continued to cycle microgrid equipment throughout the region from its base of operations in Mars Hill, a tiny college town 20 miles north of Asheville that was virtually untouched by Helene. It launched the WNC Free Store, which donates solar panels and other supplies to residents still far from recovery — like those living out of RVs and school buses after losing their homes.

From the outset, Footprint had a critical local ally in Sara Nichols, the energy and economic development manager at the Land of Sky Regional Council, a local government partnership encompassing four counties that stretch from Tennessee to South Carolina.

A lot of the other organizations we saw come through in the same way Footprint did, most of them did not stay. They leverage resources to do really important work, and when that work feels done, they go home,” Nichols said. The fact that Footprint is working thoughtfully to figure out how our recovery and resiliency can be taken care of — while also thinking about their own organizational strategic growth — means a lot to me. They’ve been incredible partners.”

To be sure, assistance and rebuilding in the region are ongoing, and many systemic inequities exacerbated by the storm can’t be solved with a solar panel. But the power is back on. The cell towers are functioning. The roads are open. Piles of debris, from fallen limbs to moldy furniture, have been cleared. In relief parlance, western North Carolina is beginning to see blue skies.”

That’s why it’s all the more important that Footprint, Appalachian Voices, and other local collaborators haven’t let up in their efforts. The web of organizations involved is thick and, seemingly, ever expanding. Last fall, the network announced it was deploying five resilience hubs around the region, including the Double Island project and a permanent microgrid at a community center in Yancey County.

These projects, driven by a small group of determined partners, have accelerated Appalachia’s long-term resilience and preparedness,” Invest Appalachia, another nonprofit partner, said in a news release.

Now, the local public-private effort is getting a boost from the state of North Carolina. Under the administration of Gov. Josh Stein, a Democrat who has made Helene recovery a centerpiece of his first-term agenda, the State Energy Office will deploy $5 million from the Biden-era Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to install up to 24 microgrids across six western counties impacted by Helene.

The money will also go to two mobile aid units for rural counties on either end of state — one in the east and one in the west. Dubbed Beehives” by Footprint, these solar-powered portable units will be full of equipment that can be deployed to purify water, set up temporary microgrids, and otherwise respond to storms and extreme weather.

Expected recipients of the stationary microgrids could include first responders like the Double Island Fire Department and second responders like community centers. Peer-to-peer facilities and small businesses are also encouraged to apply.

Land of Sky and other stakeholders are choosing grantees on a rolling basis through next summer. There’s already been an inundation of applicants, and six grantees have been selected, including a community center about a dozen miles up the road from Double Island in Mitchell County. But organizers say they need more interest from outside the Land of Sky region, especially in Avery County, north of Yancey on the Tennessee border; and Rutherford County, east of Asheville, which includes Chimney Rock, a village that was infamously devastated by Helene and is slowly rebuilding.

Geographic distribution isn’t the only problem organizers have faced. Some entities — while undoubtedly deserving of assistance — aren’t appropriate for the government grant because they are located in areas at risk of future flooding.

A battery underwater is not that useful,” Trowbridge said, so if your site is in a floodplain, maybe this isn’t the right fit for you. But we definitely want you to know about the Beehive.”

Above all, organizers like Nichols, a passionate promoter of the Appalachian Region, are determined to ensure that the state’s effort is not the be-all and end-all of resilience.

What we’re being tasked with as recipients of this money is to try and figure out how we make this a much bigger project,” she said. That means we’ve brought in other partners like Invest Appalachia. We’ve been seeking other kinds of money. We’re using this state money to successfully build what could be a much more comprehensive resiliency hub model.”

She added that communities across the country — even if they think they’re safe from extreme weather and climate disaster — could take cues from the western North Carolina example. 

We were a place that was not supposed to get a storm,” Nichols said. We were a climate haven.”

Elizabeth Ouzts is a contributing reporter at Canary Media who covers North Carolina and Virginia.

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In Hunt for Rare Earths, Companies Are Scouring Mining Waste

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Tailings and acid mine drainage from mines contain critical minerals needed for clean energy technologies. Now, researchers are developing new techniques for retrieving these key metals, which could reduce the need for new mines and help clean up pollution at old mining sites.

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Breeding Kink, or Tradwife Longing?

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There has been an extended discourse in recent months on TikTok about whether being a tradwife is a genuine lifestyle/identity, or whether it’s homesteader cosplay, or whether it’s online influencer schtick, or whether it’s sublimated kink play (usually some sort of BDSM with a side of impreg/breeding kink thrown in). The “truth” probably depends on who you ask and which tradwives you’re talking about, and there’s certainly no reason why any given family can’t pick a little bit of candy and spices from each of those baskets and mix it up however they like.

It’s against that background — and perhaps having read “too much” Omegaverse erotica, if any of us were qualified to tell another person how much is too much, which we manifestly are not — that Hannah Spiced from TikTok suggests that tradwives and podcast bros alike are yearning for the Omegaverse:

I wish that trad wives and podcast bros knew how much they actually just longed for the Omegaverse. People always talk about the alt-right pipeline; let’s talk about creating the tradwife-to-Omegaverse fan-girl pipeline. It worked for me!

I was a wannabe tradwife in high school and I wasn’t even religious.

Do you know what I realised?

I realised I just had a breeding kink.

I realised I wasn’t like that because it’s the natural place of a woman.

I realised I was like that because I’m a freak!

You don’t like that man telling you what to do because you’re traditional. You like it cause you’re a freak!

And then the podcast bros: all they ever wanna talk about is Alpha men and how cool and strong and desirable all of these Alpha men are. Babe, you’re also an Omega. Opposite side of the same damn coin. Maybe. Maybe the Rapture will isekai/transmigrate them to an omegaverse and then we’ll both be happier, both sets of people.

If you are lucky enough to be entirely innocent of Omegaverse tropes, some of the humor here is that male Omegas in Omegaverses typically (there are no universal truths in Omegaverse fiction) serve as submissive sexual bottoms to Alpha males. And due to some unique/fictional Omega biology (the Wikipedia article includes phrases like “uterus connected to the rectum” and “self-lubricating anuses”) they can and do get pregnant and bear children. So the suggestion is that all the podcast-bro no-homo yearning after super-manly men would be easier for them to satisfy in a fictional Omegaverse setting.


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‘Train Dreams’ is an ode to the lonely labor of forestry

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In the new film adaptation of Denis Johnson’s novella, I saw my own Forest Service career reflected back at me.

The post ‘Train Dreams’ is an ode to the lonely labor of forestry appeared first on High Country News.

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Batteries Fail, Life Goes On

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My power wheelchair’s first set of batteries started showing signs of failure mere months after they were given their inaugural run. Concerned, I contacted the service representative I’d been dealing with at the store through which I purchased the (remarkably expensive) chair. It took some back and forth, but she was helpful and kind and … Continue reading Batteries Fail, Life Goes On

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