BEECN Sites: Difference between revisions
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# BEECNs will be evenly distributed throughout the city and are generally sited with the goal of placing approximately two BEECNs within each of the Portland Plan’s neighborhood hub boundaries.<ref>[https://www.portland.gov/bps/planning/about-bps/portland-plan The Portland Plan] (published in 2012) rested on a concept of "complete neighborhoods", and Portland was divided into 24 different hub areas. You can download and read that part of the Plan [[Media:20 Minute Neighborhoods.Portland Plan.2012.pdf|HERE]].</ref> | # BEECNs will be evenly distributed throughout the city and are generally sited with the goal of placing approximately two BEECNs within each of the Portland Plan’s neighborhood hub boundaries.<ref>[https://www.portland.gov/bps/planning/about-bps/portland-plan The Portland Plan] (published in 2012) rested on a concept of "complete neighborhoods", and Portland was divided into 24 different hub areas. You can download and read that part of the Plan [[Media:20 Minute Neighborhoods.Portland Plan.2012.pdf|HERE]].</ref> | ||
# PBEM has complete discretion over the location of each BEECN site. However, PBEM will consider the input of property owners, community partners, city employees, and volunteers when deciding BEECN site locations. | # PBEM has complete discretion over the location of each BEECN site. However, PBEM will consider the input of property owners, community partners, city employees, and volunteers when deciding BEECN site locations. | ||
# Though moving a BEECN site should be avoided, PBEM will consider moving a site if a more appropriate one is found in the immediate neighborhood of the BEECN. However, planning to move a BEECN site must consider whether doing so will change a BEECN's Primary and Backup relays (i.e. which fire station the BEECN calls in to). | # Though moving a BEECN site should be avoided, PBEM will consider moving a site if a more appropriate one is found in the immediate neighborhood of the BEECN. However, planning to move a BEECN site must consider whether doing so will change a BEECN's Primary and Backup relays (i.e. which fire station the BEECN calls in to) and if the new site keeps the BEECN in a "20 Minute Walkable Neighborhood". | ||
=== BEECN Site criteria === | === BEECN Site criteria === | ||
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* Is not in the vicinity of tall trees, overhead power lines, or other utility hazards; | * Is not in the vicinity of tall trees, overhead power lines, or other utility hazards; | ||
* Is familiar to the community and following a disaster might be intuited by neighbors as a community gathering point, and is geographically central to the immediate community. | * Is familiar to the community and following a disaster might be intuited by neighbors as a community gathering point, and is geographically central to the immediate community. | ||
=== What a BEECN Site is not === | === What a BEECN Site is not === | ||
A BEECN Site is... | A BEECN Site is... | ||
Revision as of 14:57, 17 May 2025
| BEECN Guidelines |
| Introduction |
| BEECN Program Organization |
| BEECN Sites |
| BEECN Volunteers |
| BEECN Caches |
| Operations at BEECN Sites |
| Operations at Fire Stations |
| Back to Main Guidelines ↱ |
The BEECN Site is the geographic location intended to serve as a gathering point for persons looking for help in the aftermath of an earthquake. A BEECN Site is public information, published on maps, and Portlanders are encouraged to know where their nearest BEECN Site is.
Location of BEECN Sites

- At minimum, there will be a total of 48 BEECN sites located throughout the City of Portland.
- BEECNs will be evenly distributed throughout the city and are generally sited with the goal of placing approximately two BEECNs within each of the Portland Plan’s neighborhood hub boundaries.[1]
- PBEM has complete discretion over the location of each BEECN site. However, PBEM will consider the input of property owners, community partners, city employees, and volunteers when deciding BEECN site locations.
- Though moving a BEECN site should be avoided, PBEM will consider moving a site if a more appropriate one is found in the immediate neighborhood of the BEECN. However, planning to move a BEECN site must consider whether doing so will change a BEECN's Primary and Backup relays (i.e. which fire station the BEECN calls in to) and if the new site keeps the BEECN in a "20 Minute Walkable Neighborhood".
BEECN Site criteria
The ideal BEECN Site is:
- An open area large enough to hold a crowd of at least 100 people;
- A safe distance from unreinforced masonry structures (such as older brick structures);
- Is not on a steep gradient or near landslide hazards, and not easily subject to flooding;
- Is not in the vicinity of tall trees, overhead power lines, or other utility hazards;
- Is familiar to the community and following a disaster might be intuited by neighbors as a community gathering point, and is geographically central to the immediate community.
What a BEECN Site is not
A BEECN Site is...
- ...not necessarily the same location where the BEECN Cache is stored;
- ...not a designated medical care point, though it is possible it may serve as one after the earthquake;
- ...not a location designated for post-disaster supply distribution, though it may serve that purpose after an earthquake.
The question of adding new BEECN sites
Adding new BEECN sites can be done, but is not advised. Aside from the challenges of placing a new equipment cache, PBEM needs to consider radio traffic loads at fire stations and at the EOC. Emergency radio traffic prospectively from 48 to 50 different sites already pushes the limits of what the system can handle. Adding more is likely untenable.
Notes and References
- ↑ The Portland Plan (published in 2012) rested on a concept of "complete neighborhoods", and Portland was divided into 24 different hub areas. You can download and read that part of the Plan HERE.