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Governor's Office of Emergency Services Statewide Exercise Program

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Title: Governor's Office of Emergency Services Statewide Exercise Program


1
  • Governors Office of Emergency Services Statewide
    Exercise Program
  • Southern Region Catastrophic Earthquake Exercise
    partnering with
  • United States Geological Survey
  • Golden Guardian 2008
  • Dare to Prepare Campaign
  • Earthquake Country Alliance

2
Governors Office of Emergency Services Statewide
Exercise Program
  • Ms. Curry Mayer, State Exercise Officer
  • State Exercise Program Update
  • New Exercise Page
  • Statewide Exercise Strategy
  • Training and Exercise Needs Assessment
  • SEMS/NIMS Integration 07/08

3
Governors Office of Emergency Services Statewide
Exercise Program
  • State Emergency Responder Credentialing Program
  • New Specialist Certificates
  • State Emergency Plan/Administrative Orders
  • COOP/COG and ORP
  • GG 07
  • The NEW FEMA
  • Federal DHS National Exercise Program

4
Governors Office of Emergency Services Southern
Regional Administrator
  • Mr. Stephen Sellers
  • 12 Years at OES
  • Over 45 State and Federal Disasters
  • Southern Region contains 2/3 of the States
    diverse population
  • Nuclear Power Plants, 2 major port complexes,
    fires, floods, earthquakes, tsunamis, etc
  • Regional Emergency Operations Center

5
Why we must act now.
  • 2007 is the 150th anniversary of the last great
    San Andreas earthquake in Southern California.
  • Scientists are nervous about the potential for
    another great earthquake on the San Andreas
    fault, especially the southernmost section.
  • There will be major loss of life and property
    unless we each take action now to be ready, by
    securing our buildings and their contents.

6
Common beliefs about earthquakes
  • California will fall in the ocean someday
  • Northridge was a big-one
  • It wont happen here
  • Earthquakes happen in the morning, when its hot
    and dry, etc.
  • The most damage in an earthquake is always at
    the epicenter
  • Scientists really do know how to predict
    earthquakes but dont want to cause a panic

7
The San Andreas - our master fault
8
Lets talk about our faults
SCEC Community Fault Model 3-dimensional
structures of major faults
9
Major Southern California faults in 3D
SoCalFaults3D.mov
  • The Puente Hills fault
  • Four large earthquakes in the last 10,000 years.

  • A potential 7.5 magnitude earthquake on this
    fault will cause great devastation.
  • These earthquakes occur much less frequently than
    San Andreas earthquakes.

10
Southern California is Earthquake Country!
11
23 large earthquakes since 1933
Date Time (local)
Location Magnitude
1. 03.10.1933 554 pm Long Beach 6.4
2. 03.25.1937 849 am San Jacinto 6.0
3. 05.18.1940 837 pm Imperial Valley 6.9
4. 10.21.1942 930 am Fish Creek Mountains 6.6
5. 03.15.1946 549 am Walker Pass 6.0
6. 04.10.1947 758 am Manix 6.5
7. 12.04.1948 343 pm Desert Hot Springs 6.0
8. 07.21.1952 352 am Kern County 7.5
9. 11.21.1952 1146 pm Bryson 6.2
10. 03.19.1954 154 am Arroyo Salada 6.4
11. 04.09.1968 629 pm Borrego Mountain 6.5
12. 02.09.1971 601 am San Fernando 6.6
13. 10.15.1979 454 pm Imperial Valley 6.4
14. 07.08.1986 221 am North Palm Springs 5.9
15. 10.01.1987 742 am Whittier Narrows 5.9
16. 11.23.1987 554 pm Elmore Ranch 6.2
17. 11.24.1987 515 am Superstition Hills 6.6
18. 04.22.1992 950 pm Joshua Tree 6.1
19. 06.28.1992 457 am Landers 7.3
20. 06.28.1992 805 am Big Bear 6.3
21. 01.17.1994 430 am Northridge 6.7
22. 10.16.1999 246 am Hector Mine 7.1
23. 12.22.2003 1115 am San Simeon 6.5
12
Potential earthquake shaking
Regions near major, active faults, will on avera
ge experience stronger shaking more frequently.
This intense shaking can damage even strong,
modern buildings.
Regions distant from known, active faults. Will
experience lower levels of shaking. In most
earthquakes, only weaker masonry buildings would
be damaged. However, very infrequent earthquakes
could still cause strong shaking here.
13
Northridge earthquake
  • Jan. 17, 1994
  • Magnitude 6.7
  • 10x10 mile section of fault moved, all
    underground, from Southeast to Northwest
  • 40 billion
  • 33 deaths

14
Ft. Tejon Earthquake our last Big One
  • Jan. 9, 1857
  • Magnitude 7.9
  • 225 mile long rupture, from Northwest to Southeast

Northridge
  • As long as 23 Northridge-sized faults
  • Today at least 150 billion

15
Southern California in 1857
16
Southern California in 2007
  • Over 23 million people
  • Fastest growing areas are close to the San
    Andreas

17
Our most likely next Big One
  • Southernmost San Andreas
  • Magnitude 7.8
  • Shaking for 2-4 minutes!
  • This will likely happen in our lifetimes, and
    could actually happen today.

18
Strong shaking throughout the most populated
areas of So. Cal.
  • A regional disaster
  • You and your neighbors will need to rely on each
    other for several days join or form a Community
    Emergency Response Team (CERT)

19
Sediment-filled valleys amplify shaking
20
Sediment-filled valleys amplify shaking
21
SanAndreasEarthquake.mov
22
Most railroads, highways, aqueducts, power lines
into LA cross the San Andreas fault
23
EQ 000000
EQ 000000
  • 000000 Earthquake Nucleates
  • 000010 Electric Circuits Near Epicenter Begin
    to Trip Off
  • 000010 DWP et al. and ISO Op- Centers Initiate
    Power Shedding to Balance Grid
  • 000015 Progressive Blackout of Region
    Initiated to Prevent Cascading Failure
  • 000030 Strong Ground Motions Felt Throughout
    Southern California

24
EQ 000035
  • 000035 State Warning Center Receives Calls
    from Southern Counties on CALWAS Expletive!
    Were having an Earthquake
  • 000045 Electrical Power Off in Most of the
    Southern California
  • 000100 Earthquake Reported on Fox and CNN

25
EQ 000100
  • Strong Ground Motions Taper Off
  • Southern County 911 Centers are Saturated
  • Phone Systems Saturated
  • State Warning Center Begins Notification of Key
    State Agencies, Executive Staff, Governors
    Office

26
EQ 000300
  • CISN Posts Location of Earthquake Epicenter
  • Local Governments Responding to What They Can
    See
  • State Warning Center Initiates Activation of
    State Operations Center
  • CalTrans Initiates Remote Video Inspections of
    Bridges (If Operational)

27
EQ 000300
  • CalTrans Maintenance and Traffic Operations
    Personnel Mobilized to EOCs and Maintenance
    Facilities
  • Media Provides Initial Public Information on
    Emergency Alert System

28
EQ 000500
  • CISN Posts Epicenter Location, Magnitude
  • UC Berkeley Confirms Magnitude, Location to
    State Warning Center
  • Caltech Off-line
  • WCATWC Issues Tsunami Information Bulletin

29
EQ 000800
  • CISN Posts First ShakeMap From UC Berkeley
  • ShakeMap Downloaded to Federal, State and County
    Agencies
  • ShakeMap is the First Image of the Event
  • How Big?
  • How Bad?
  • Where?

30
EQ 001000
  • State OES Completes Notification of Executive
    Staff, State Agencies and FEMA
  • Governor and Staff Briefed
  • State OES Mobilizes Response Team To Sacramento
    and Southern Region
  • Statewide Mobilization of Fire and Law Mutual Aid
    System
  • California National Guard Mobilized

31
EQ 002000
  • USGS Issues Automated Aftershock Forecast (90
    Probability of M5 and Larger Aftershocks in Next
    7 days)
  • 5 to 10 Probability of Larger Event

32
USGS Aftershock Assessment
  • 7 Day Interval Calculated 20 Minutes After the
    Quake
  • Magnitude Probability Number
  • --------------- -------------- ---------------
  • 5 100 46 (33-59)
  • 6 100 6 (1-10)
  • 7 50 1 (0-2)

33
EQ 003000
  • OES GIS Staff are Recalled to Run HAZUS Loss
    Estimate
  • Fire Mutual Aid Dispatched to Damaged Areas and
    Staging Areas
  • CalTrans Imports ShakeMap into Damage Assessment
    Tools

34
EQ 003500
  • OES Executive Requests Federal Assistance from
    FEMA, Based on ShakeMap (National Response Plan)
  • Urban Search Rescue Task Forces (USAR)
  • Disaster Medical Assistance Teams (DMAT)
  • Disaster Mortuary Teams (DMORT)
  • Emergency Response Teams (ERT)
  • Liaisons to Emergency Support Functions (ESF) for
    National Response Plan

35
EQ 020000
  • Initial HAZUS Damage Estimates Available
  • State Provides Initial Damage Estimates to FEMA
    and Request Presidential Disaster Declaration
  • CalTrans and Highway Patrol Coordinating
    Inspections and Traffic Controls
  • CalTrans Assessing Residual Capacity

36
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37
HAZUS Estimates
Estimated Building Damage by Occupancy
38
Lifeline Damage
Estimated Utility Pipeline Damage
39
Highway Bridge Damage
Estimated Damage to Transportation
40
Secondary Impacts
Estimated Fire Ignitions and Debris Generated
41
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42
Care and Shelter Demand
43
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44
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45
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46
Electric Power Potable Water
Estimated Households Without Service
47
Estimated Casualties
48
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49
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50
Economic Impact
51
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52
Common beliefs about earthquake preparedness
  • It won't happen to me
  • Well just pick up the pieces
  • Just get in the doorway
  • Having water and supplies is enough
  • Im prepared for anything
  • My house has always done ok in earthquakes, it
    must be built very well
  • It will be so big, nothing can be done

53
The Seven Steps to Earthquake Safety
54
www.daretoprepare.org
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