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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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1993-04-15
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<text id=89TT2888>
<link 89TT2806>
<title>
Nov. 06, 1989: Is Los Angeles Next?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Nov. 06, 1989 The Big Break
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 24
Is Los Angeles Next?
</hdr><body>
<p>Southern California finds flaws in its plans for the Big One
</p>
<p>By Frank Trippett/Reported by Jeanne McDowell/Los Angeles and J.
Madeleine Nash/Chicago
</p>
<p> San Francisco may have established itself as the earthquake
capital of the U.S., but seismologists have long warned that
Los Angeles is the more vulnerable city. Because Los Angeles has
not suffered a massive tremor in this century and has a much
larger population, a major quake could result in far greater
devastation. The Federal Emergency Management Agency estimates
that an 8.3 magnitude temblor (16 times as powerful as the one
that hit San Francisco) on the southern San Andreas fault near
Los Angeles could cause $17 billion in property damage and
between 3,000 and 14,000 deaths.
</p>
<p> Galvanized by the fear that they may be next, Southern
Californians are urgently reassessing their plans for coping
with the Big One. "What was foremost in many people's minds,"
says filmmaker Gina Blumenfeld, "was the fact that the San
Francisco quake could have just as easily happened here."
Residents stocked their homes with bottled water, canned food,
batteries and first-aid supplies, snapped up wrenches to turn
off the gas and prepacked earthquake kits that sell for $30 to
$210. Some of the preparations had an only-in-Hollywood quality.
One woman whose emergency gear includes a butane curling iron
says she is looking for a battery-operated hair dryer that can
be used if electricity is knocked out. "Why look a mess even in
a crisis?" she teases.
</p>
<p> Experts are unnervingly in agreement that Los Angeles is
overdue for a catastrophic shaking. "We feel there is a 60%
probability for an earthquake with a magnitude of 7.5 or larger
some time in the next 30 years," says James H. Dieterich, a
geophysicist for the U.S. Geological Survey. Last year the
survey reported that the Los Angeles area overlies three fault
segments, any of which is capable of producing an enormous
quake. Since 1857, when a monster measuring 8.3 on the Richter
scale strewed destruction from the Cholame Valley in central
California to the Cajon Pass near San Bernardino, Los Angeles
has experienced a succession of lesser tremors. Six quakes of
at least 4.5 magnitude have been registered in the past two
years, and some geologists suspect those rumblings are the
prelude to a cataclysm.
</p>
<p> The region has long been aware of its special
vulnerabilities. Its water comes in by aqueducts that a big
quake would fracture. Like the devastated Marina district in San
Francisco, parts of coastal communities such as Marina Del Rey,
Venice and Long Beach are built on sandy soil and landfill that
could liquefy during a temblor, amplifying its destructive
impact. State transportation officials last week handed the city
council a list of 48 highway bridges and overpasses that need
reinforcement to withstand a powerful quake. Cost: $32 million.
Los Angeles' city engineer Robert Horii informed the city
council that $100 million worth of shoring up may be required
on the city's bridges and viaducts. Said Horii: "I didn't
believe the urgency was there until what happened last week."
Pointing to the collapse of Oakland's Interstate 880, some
officials questioned whether an elevated section of the Harbor
Freeway should be built; state transportation officials asked
for an investigation to review the freeway plans.
</p>
<p> In 1981 the city set tough standards for strengthening
unreinforced masonry buildings constructed before 1933. Work
has been done or begun on 4,000 such buildings, but 2,400
remain unrepaired. Mayor Tom Bradley acknowledged last week that
the city has moved too slowly to demand compliance, and other
officials vowed to pressure owners to speed up the work. Said
Councilman Hal Bernson, author of the 1981 law: "If the money's
available and they are not willing to do the work, then we as
a city are going to have to step in and take control."
</p>
<p> Los Angeles has developed a detailed "emergency operations
master plan," specifying how various city agencies should
respond to a quake. In the event of a disaster, the mayor and
police chief would take charge from a strongly constructed
operations center four stories below city hall. About 2,800
civilian volunteers have been trained to help in emergencies.
</p>
<p> To prepare young children psychologically, a "Quaky, Shaky"
van, which can mimic a tremor, is sent around to elementary
schools. The county's emergency plans will soon be put to a big
test. Sometime in the next few weeks, phone calls will go out
to emergency workers in 60 to 70 municipalities, informing them
that a magnitude 7 quake has occurred on the Newport-Inglewood
fault. "If we find out that people were not notified or don't
know whom to contact, we can correct the problem," says Bob
Canfield, Los Angeles' emergency-preparedness coordinator.
</p>
<p> In the past, Los Angeles' sense of urgency about
preparation tended to end with the aftershocks of minor quakes.
This time promises to be different. Long after the news out of
San Francisco tapers off, Los Angeles will have a reminder.
Earlier this year Universal Studios opened an amusement
park-style simulator that shows how it feels to be tossed about
by an 8.3 earthquake like the one that flattened San Francisco
in 1906. The ride is called Earthquake: the Big One.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>