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By the time a surge works its way through the bay and into downtown, it would only be about three feet deep said Gibson. That would still flood Blossom Gulch Elementary School. During the drill, more than 500 kids there will duck and cover under their desks, as if an earthquake was violently shaking the ground, said Vice Principal Jared Olsen. Then they will file outside and hike a quarter mile up the hill to the high school football field. Each will have a number so they don't get lost. At Coast Guard Air Station North Bend, just 17 feet above sea level, one of the five helicopters will fly to higher ground at Southwest Oregon Community College, where students and staff are to gather at assembly points. Coast Guard staff will stay at their posts in case of a real emergency, but some will hike uphill to an assembly point, said Lt. Michael Baird. In Charleston Harbor, Wade Raub lives on his sailboat and works on a commercial tuna fishing boat. He said he was not taking part in the drill, but all the people in the boat basin were plugged in and aware of the dangers. "If we really have a tsunami, I'll be cutting lines and sailing over the bar," into the open ocean, he said. "That's the safest place to be. You give me 10 minutes, I'll be over the bar. Give me 20 minutes, I'll be a mile out."
[Associated
Press;
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