Monday, August 27, 2007

Attitude Preparedness

Hi everyone,

 

I have been on the road or in the skies and in other states of this great USA most of the month.  I have not written much for the month of August, other than to encourage you all assess your own preparedness efforts.

I am grateful I came home safe from all my travels for it truly is a dangerous world out there and in this mortal life, there is no guarantee that any of us will be here tomorrow.  

In the past month, we have seen, via the news media, much tragedy throughout the world and our country: floods, earthqaukes, mines collapsing, bridges collapsing, fires erupting, car bombs blowing off, people shooting guns,etc. The day we left our family reunion in Bear Lake, a 17 year old  high school athlete drowned there. It could have been me.

 

 As I was thinking about this, I happened to be visiting a favorite website of mine and found a great article on this very subject: Our attitudes in the face of disaster.  I will give you the link here and hopefully it is still posted on the home page.  The article is by Orson Scott card, and the title is The Aftermath of Tragedy. Please read it. Thank you.~ Joan (I would have cut and pasted it hear but I think I need permission to do that.)

  http://www.meridianmagazine.com/ideas/070827tragedy.html 

 

 

Posted by Joanie at 21:06:32 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

For August, 2007 Awareness of Reality!!!!

For August… (and I apologize for not posting any entries for a long time..we were traveling and I am making a trip to Maryland tomrrow ),..I would like you all, and myself, to look at your preparation efforts..especially what you have in your car.  The latest news, the reality about earthquakes in S. California is this: A big one is long overdue. When it happens, many major freeways will be down.  You want you car to be a well stocked haven, a comfortable place while you await some sort of rescue or repair or alternate route plan. I look at it this way: I have a certain mental attitude whenever I travel to aplace I have never been before. The attitude is this: you will probably get lost, so plan more than enough time. 

Our attitude, I believe, whenever we go down the Cajon Pass should be this: There is a good chance an earthquake will hit.  Do I have a pillow, blanket, water, food, etc. (a flashlight and a good book, our cell phone, etc.) for an overnight stay on some crowded highway somewhere? 

Last Saturday….I found this article in the LA Times…Please read it to get the sense of urgency and preparation you need.

 

Scientist makes dire earthquake prediction
A major earthquake in the Coachella Valley is long overdue, she says,
and her research foresees ‘a whole new level of disaster.’
By David Kelly
August 10, 2007 LA Times

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. — Sandwiched between the powerful San Andreas and San Jacinto faults, the Coachella Valley could be the epicenter of the most devastating earthquake in the country, one that is already 300 years overdue, a government scientist warned Thursday.

“There will be several thousand dead and billions of dollars in damage,” said Lucy Jones, a seismologist at the U.S. Geological Survey and a member of the California Seismic Safety Commission. She also said a devastating quake could topple buildings as far away as Los Angeles.

This apocalyptic vision was presented to members of the seismic safety panel who met in Rancho Mirage to discuss how the Coachella Valley would handle a catastrophic earthquake. The meeting took place the day a quake registering magnitude 4.6 shook up Chatsworth.

The power of that quake was negligible compared with the scenarios laid out by Jones.

Historically, major temblors have struck the Coachella Valley every 150 years, on average, but for reasons no one can explain, it’s been quiet for 300 years.

“Whatever it is that makes for a long interval is happening now, and we know that long interval can’t last forever,” Jones said. “This is an overdue fault.”

Stresses are building under the San Andreas and San Jacinto faults, which could cause the ground to move as fast as 10 feet a second during an earthquake. The Northridge quake in 1994 moved about 6 feet a second.

A likely scenario would have a magnitude-7.8 earthquake strike in the Salton Sea, extending north and west toward Palmdale. Jones predicted the shaking could last more than 100 seconds, kill thousands, destroy homes, collapse the I-10 and I-15 freeways, ignite petroleum pipelines and leave untold thousands homeless in potentially searing desert heat. The long-term effects, she said, could be akin to the economic collapse of New Orleans and the Gulf region following Hurricane Katrina.

“This will have long-term economic implications across the nation,” she said.

It would be even worse should the quake hit during Santa Ana winds, possibly adding fires as another major element to the disaster, Jones said.

Jones said Los Angeles would not be spared. The tremendous forces released by the slipping faults would send shock waves through the earth that could easily collapse tall buildings in Los Angeles the way the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, which hit near Watsonville, collapsed the Bay Bridge between Oakland and San Francisco about 50 miles away.

“This is a whole new level of disaster,” she said.

Riverside County emergency officials said that unlike tornadoes and hurricanes, which occur every year, earthquakes hit sporadically, and it’s hard to get people to prepare for them.

“In times of disaster we have everyone’s ear, but when it comes to preparedness we can’t get anyone’s attention,” said John Hardcastle, emergency services coordinator for Palm Springs.

Kathleen Henderson spends two or three days a week traveling throughout the county urging residents to be ready.

“My biggest concern is the heat and air conditioning for the children and the elderly,” said Henderson, emergency services coordinator for the Riverside County Fire Department. “If the quake happened during the hottest period of the year, I think we would have a lot of heat-related emergencies and deaths. We have a lot of elderly people. They will need to talk to a doctor about how much medication they should have on hand.”

Jones, chief scientist for the USGS’ multi-hazards demonstration project, is putting together a detailed report describing the likely effects of a major Coachella Valley earthquake.

“If something happens, no one can say you haven’t tried to warn us,” Rancho Mirage Mayor G. Dana Hobart told Jones. “We should put a box on the front page of the paper each day saying we are 3,600 months and 75 days overdue for a quake to remind people to be ready.”

Posted by Joanie at 00:54:37 | Permalink | Comments (1) »