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Understand Bay Area Problems. Bay Area Faults Earth Material.

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Presentation on theme: "Understand Bay Area Problems. Bay Area Faults Earth Material."— Presentation transcript:

1 Understand Bay Area Problems

2 Bay Area Faults

3 Earth Material

4 Transportation routes

5 BART

6 Landslides

7 Liquefaction

8 Flooding

9 Fires 1906 Kobe, 1995 1989, Loma Prieta

10 In addition: Power outages: (10 days in New Orleans) Loss of immediate emergency services Loss of local communication

11 Hayward fault earthquakeearthquake Potential of a M7 earthquake 2 ½ million people live in close proximity Unconsolidated sediments and bay mud Transportation lines Directly through urban areas

12 Catastrophe Is partially defined when the disaster is so large that all forms of emergency plans fail Innovative and non-linear ideas are needed Government cannot always respond in this manner Martial law-1906 earthquake “Looters” apprehended while victims were without help- Katrina

13 Katrina August-December 16,000 people displaced 1000 schools gone 41/2 million cubic yards of debris 815 million dollars of public assistance 10 days for PG&E to reestablish service

14 People tend to help each other Government is afraid of losing control Looters: shoot to kill

15 Government Assistance-Recovery: 1906 earthquake

16 Breakfast, March 11 th, 1933 2000 Sailors and Marines helped in the aftermath

17 San Simeon Earthquake Mw 6.5 12/22/03 Reverse fault Hypocenter: 12 miles MM VIII 2 fatalities

18 San Simeon Earthquake Declared a state emergency –December 27 th Federally eligible funds for rental assistance and home repairs- $68 million Small business bureau- $5 million OES- dealing with Southern Ca firestorm and Homeland Security 2500 people visited FEMA centers

19 San Simeon Earthquake Need for Mutual Aid Resources to coordinate money distribution Cell-phone compliance with building code Improve building codes URM structures must post sign warning of danger

20 Search and Rescue Urban Search and Rescue system 27 teams Funded by FEMA Each team has 62 specialists medical personnel, structural engineers, canines

21 Search and Rescue Trained and certified know how to safely go into collapsed structures and systematically search an area locate trapped people and let the handler know

22 Disaster Mitigation Act of 2000 A state, local or tribal government shall develop a plan and submit the plan to the Federal government for approval

23 ABAG’S Local Hazard Mitigation Plan Public policies: potential hazards Fulfill the requirements of the Disaster Mitigation Act of 2000 Funded by FEMA

24 Recovery in the United States Federal Government-Homeland Security and Federal Emergency Management Agency State Government- Office of Emergency Services Local Government- County and City

25 Federal Government Federal Government-Homeland Security and Federal Emergency Management Agency President declares the area a national disaster Distributes emergency money and accepts applications for low cost loans May work with up to 28 other federal agencies –Department of energy –Small business bureau –Department of agriculture

26 Federal Government Provides the initial emergency response through its service agencies Activates the Emergency Operations Center and the Emergency Operations Plan Coordinates the response with public and private organizations Activates mutual aid

27 State Government Reviews and evaluates the local situation Determines whether the situation is beyond the capability of the State to handle Proclaims a state of emergency Requests Federal assistance

28 State Government Office of Emergency Services Disaster response- gathering of accurate disaster damage data for the Governor and President Recovery- help direct funds and help where needed 6 regions Emergency training

29 Office of Emergency Services San Jose PREPARED Local chapter of state agency to provide education, training and support to individuals and emergency response teams

30 The Red Cross Chartered by Congress in 1905 national and international relief disaster relief includes shelter, food, health and mental health services assistance is given to help people resume their normal activities provides blood

31 American Red Cross Feeds emergency workers helps people outside a disaster area obtain information about individuals located within a disaster area relies on volunteers education and preparation responds to more than 67,000 disasters/year

32 Human impact Personal messages posted on van at Emergency Center. Loma Prieta earthquake, 1989 Photo credit: C.E. Meyer, U.S. Geological Survey

33 Recovery: developing countries Dependent on international aid: private and government organizations Sumatra earthquake and tsunami, 2004 Pakistan earthquake, 2005 China earthquake, 2009 Haiti earthquake, 2010 Chile earthquake, 2010

34 Evaluation of Structures

35 Turning off the gas Turn the valve with a wrench or special tool The off position shows the valve perpendicular to the pipe turn 1/4 of a turn

36 Personal Preparedness Emergency plans Eliminate non-structural hazards Prepare emergency supplies: home and car Understand possible hazards in Bay Area depending on location of epicenter Understand hazards at locations Understand possible scenarios: work; school; home Know what to do when shaking ends

37 Thank-you, for a great semester! Know where the nearest fault is at home, work or school Be aware of the surroundings, at all times Have an emergency route planned back to home before the earthquake occur Communicate an emergency plan with family members or roommates Have food, water and medical supplies on hand Best wishes to survive the next earthquake!


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