Like amber74 said, the building codes are somewhat of a comfort. However, it's been almost 15 years since the last big quake and buidlings and bridges that were found to be inadequate then are
still not retrofitted.
I was only several miles from the epicenter of the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. I lived in Santa Cruz. It was an experience that changed my life for many many years and still today in some aspects.
Prior to this quake, I had only lived in CA for about 4 years and had only experienced "small" quakes that used to make me giggle because they caused me to be a little dizzy and momentarily disoriented. It was like having a little buzz.
But after seeing my neighbors losing their homes, merchants losing their businesses, and people losing their lives I started taking the temblors, even the small ones, very seriously. After seeing the freeway collapse in Oakland, still to this day I feel very uncomfortable sitting under an overpass in car.
But you do learn to live with the possibility/eventuality. Being prepared and educated is the number one thing. Neighborhood disaster training is a big thing here. Most cities, at least in northern California have Certified Emergency Response Team (CERT) training. Neighborhoods can organize to kick into action if a big quake should hit. We learn search and rescue, basic firefighting, and of course first aid with cpr (advanced for those in the healthcare area such as myself).
We learn about the possibility of flooding, gas leaks, where the main sewers/water lines are in our area, and so much more. Each prepared neighborhood and person or family who chooses to participate is prepared to survive on it's/their own without any outside help from local fire/ambulance/police for 72 hours. There is a hamm operator in my neighborhood who would hook up directly with the OES for communications. Each neighborhood ideally has a hamm operator.
It's comforting to know that many of my neighbors have disaster training.
There are also strict requirements for school, childcare center, and public places for preparedness. Kids are taught to duck and cover. It's a way of life here, really.
During the 1989 quake, my son was 10 months old. It was just about 5 pm and I was watching the end of Oprah and my son was on the floor in front of the television playing. As soon as the show ended I picked him up to carry him into the kitchen with me to start preparing dinner. As soon as I picked him up it was like a bomb had dropped outside my front door. I fumbled and stumbled my way to the hallway leading to the bathroom and wedged my son between my knees and braced myself in my bathroom doorway.
The shaking and rolling was so severe that I ended up on my butt on the floor with him still between my legs. As I looked around my house, half of it would rise like what seemed to be about 10-15 feet and then lower as the other half rose. Truly surreal and in slow motion. Seemed like it lasted forever but in reality only lasted 15 seconds.
We slept outside that night in a tent with a group of neighbors.
The next day every muscle in my body was so sore. I had a bruise down my back and on the inside of each thigh. My son was fine and I'm so glad he was so young. He was spared the emotional trauma that older children suffered. I think I suffered from some post traumatic stress for a couple of years...everytime a big truck would drive by I would feel the rumbling and my adreline would go wild!
I could go on and on about the aftershocks and the aftermath, but the one thing that will ALWAYS stand out in my mind is that when that initial "bomb" hit, my television hit the floor EXACTLY where my son was playing. If I had not picked him up to bring him with me to the kitchen, the 32 inch TV would have fallen on him. He would have been injured terribly. Needless to say, these days everthing is secured in my house.
The funny thing I will never forget is to keep my toilet lid closed. As I was wedged in the bathroom door, I watched all the items I had on a shelf above the commode fall into the open bowl!!
So there ya go. That's my experience and I don't want to minimize anyone's natural disasters by any means, but I'd much rather have a little warning to get out of town or to a secure area when an impending disaster is about to happen!
On the other hand, I learned that we are simply visitors on this great earth, little dots in the greater scheme of things. Mother nature has awesome powers. Also - I would not want to live anywhere in the country but where I live now...earthquakes and all!
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