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Cell Phones, Pagers, etc. Please turn to OFF, VIBRATE, or SILENT. To Download CERT Program Materials: http://training.fema.gov/emiweb/CERT/ www.cert-la.com. A HISTORY OF CERT. 1987 – LAFD Disaster Preparedness Founded 1988 – First CERT Team Trained
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Cell Phones, Pagers, etc. Please turn to OFF, VIBRATE, or SILENT
To Download CERT Program Materials: http://training.fema.gov/emiweb/CERT/ www.cert-la.com
A HISTORY OF CERT • 1987 – LAFD Disaster Preparedness Founded • 1988 – First CERT Team Trained • 1994 – FEMA Accepted CERT AS #1 Program For Citizen Preparedness • 2002 – Citizen Corps
Course Syllabus Class 1 - Earthquake Preparedness, and CERT Operations Class 2 - Disaster Fire Suppression Class 3 - Disaster Medical Operations, Session 1 Class 4 - Disaster Medical Operations, Session 2 Class 5 - Light Search & Rescue Operations Class 6 - Team Organization & Management Class 7 – Homeland Defense
Class 1 Objectives • Describe the types of hazards most likely to affect your home and community. • Describe the functions of CERT’s and their role in immediate response. • Identify steps to prepare yourself for disasters.
We Need Citizen Volunteers? • 95% of all rescues performed in times of disaster or national emergency are performed by spontaneous rescuers • People Like YOU • Neighbor helping neighbor
We Need Citizen Volunteers? • 1992 - LA Riots • 1993 - Floods • 1993 - California Brush Fires • 1994 - Northridge Earthquake • 1996 - California Brush Fires • 1998 - El Nino • 2001 - Terrorism • 2003 - California Brush Fires
What Is A Disaster • Anything that exceeds our ability to handle the problem • Exceeds Resources • Exceeds Rescue Personnel • Results in Great Loss of Life • Results in Massive Destruction
Disasters Disasters can be . . . • Manmade • Terrorist Attack, War • Technological • Power, Telephone, Water or Food System Failures • Biological • Plague, Flu, AIDS • Natural • Earthquakes, Fire, Flood, Hurricane, etc.
SMALL <5.0 MODERATE 5.0 - 6.0 LARGE 6.0 - 7.0 MAJOR 7.0 - 8.0 GREAT >8.0 Magnitude - The Richter Scale
1857 - Fort Tejon - 7.8 • January 9, 1857 - 8:20 am • Last great quake on the San Andreas in Southern California • Only 2 deaths • 1 woman died in her adobe house collapse • 1 man died from a heart attack • 60 miles away in L.A
1933 - Long Beach - 6.4 • Pre-1933 Buildings (Jefferson Jr. High School) • Changed building codes • Prohibited unreinforced brick and masonry buildings
1964 - Anchorage, Alaska - 9.2 • Duration • >4 min • 10,000 Aftershocks • Largest EQ ever in the U.S • 2nd Largest In World • 1st Chile 1960, 9.5 • Deaths – 115
1971- Sylmar - 6.7 • Olive View Medical Center • New building • Liquefaction
1971- Sylmar - 6.7 • Sepulveda VA Hospital • Pre-1933 construction
1987 - Whittier - 5.9 • One Death • Crushed under falling debris • Went from indoors to outdoors • Friend who remained indoors was uninjured • Majority Of Damage Was To Older Structures
1989 - Loma Prieta, Bay Area - 7.0 • Much of the damage in San Francisco could be directly related to the type of soils that structures were built on.
1994 - Northridge - 6.7 • 57 Deaths • Over one-half the deaths occurred after the shaking stopped • Time of day limited potential death count
CSUN • Major Damage to Multiple Structures • Parking Structures Collapse
Bridge Failures during the NR Earthquake 5 / 14 INTERCHANGE
Tsunami – The Unexpected Hazard • Tsunami (Open Ocean) Waves • Caused by large under ocean land movement • Local Waves • Caused by underwater landslides in bays and fiords • ALASKA TSUNAMI IN VALDEZ WAS APPROX. 70 METERS TALL
Tsunami - Valdez, Alaska 1964 • The Tsunami in Valdez, AK snapped off these trees. • Caused 82 deaths in Alaska • 4 in Newport Beach California • 16 in Oregon
Sudden mixing of Soil and Groundwater Increases damage Tall & narrow buildings behave poorly High-rise buildings with foundations going to bedrock do well Areas of fill soils, ancient river or lake beds, or with poorly compacted soils do not do well in an EQ Liquefaction
Disruption of Transportation & City Services • All City services will be over extended • Normal services will not be available • You will have to rely on your own resources, skills and knowledge • Supplies and assistance will be slow to arrive
Driving during an EQ • Slow Down. • Pull Over and STOP. • Turn on the Radio for Emergency Bulletins. • Proceed Cautiously if it is Safe to do so. • Obey “Road Closed” signs. • Avoid Crossing Damaged Roads. • Avoid Power Lines. • Do Not Stop Under Underpasses or on Bridges. • Do Not Drive Through Water. • Do Not Abandon Your Car
Seek A Safe Location & Stay There! • Travel immediately after an earthquake will be extremely hazardous. • There is a chance what you felt was a pre-quake to an equal or greater event coming in the next 2 hours. • Stay Where You Are • Seek a Safe Location and Stay Alert • DON’T GO SIGHTSEEING
Have Emergency Supplies In Your Car • First Aid Supplies • Water • Walking Shoes • You may be walking home • Warm Clothing • Rain Gear • Some Food • Not as important as H20
Walking immediately after the EQ will be extremely dangerous • More buildings collapse from aftershock than from the main earthquake • Rubble may be thrown 1-1/2 times the height of the building
We Know That After A Major Earthquake • Vital services may not be able to assist you • They have the same problems everyone else does. • Some Fire Companies had to cut themselves out of their fire stations. • There will be a loss of access to many areas
You Also Need To Prepare to Evacuate • Other Disasters May Follow: • Flood • Dam burst • Riot • Looting • Fire Storm • Toxic Chemical Leak
Electrical Power • Power may be out for Weeks. • Have battery operated sources of light. • Have plenty of extra batteries • Don’t use open flame or fuel stoves & heaters indoors • Be aware of downed power lines. • May energize metal fences • May reenergize at any time until repaired • Consider the use of generators.
Communication • Telephone services are cut and restored on a priority basis • Government & Emergency Lines • Long Distance • Pay Phones • Business & Residential • Your phone may not be turned on for days or until call load has dropped • Pay phones will be the 1st working phone that the general public will have access to. Remember to have small change
Cellular Telephones • Are actually radios • Should work • But will probably be overloaded • May only work if calling another cell phone • On the same cell system
Out-of-State Contact • Outside of the area of potential impact • Long Distance • All family is informed of such and agrees