Today, Governor Tina Kotek signed Executive Order 25-22 to help make sure the government can respond when Oregonians need help most. The executive order directs the Department of Administrative Services (DAS) to develop a plan to ensure new state buildings over 10,000 square feet meet the highest seismic safety standards and establishes.
Oregon faces significant earthquake risk in the next fifty years. When an earthquake hits, state facilities serve as essential staging areas and workspaces for emergency response and recovery efforts. Furthermore, state employees must be able to safely evacuate buildings and continue providing essential services to help communities recover.
"When a devastating earthquake hits Oregon, we need to be able to show up for Oregonians,” Governor Kotek said. “State employees are the backbone of emergency response, and they need safe places as they help families and communities recover. We cannot waver from this responsibility."
"Oregon is setting an example for how to start building resiliency to large earthquakes,” Dr. Chris Goldfinger, Professor Emeritus at the College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences at Oregon State University, said. “An M8-9 earthquake in our future is inevitable, and seismically sound state buildings will be crucial. This is the kind of proactive action Oregon needs."
"In the aftermath of a major earthquake, every minute counts. Safe, resilient facilities are not just buildings—they’re lifelines,” Priscilla Fuentes, Chief Executive Officer of the Red Cross Cascade Region, said. “They allow emergency responders to mobilize quickly, shelter those in need, and coordinate relief efforts that save lives.”
The executive order prioritizes improvements to buildings identified in state continuity of operations plans, office buildings over 50,000 square feet, structures supporting first responders, institutional housing, and strategic regional locations. DAS will develop standards and implementation plans under the existing Statewide Facilities Planning Process.
"Preparing our state for an earthquake is a long game," Governor Kotek said. "Protecting Oregonians when disaster strikes is too important to delay. We must start now and stay committed to this work for decades to come."
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