10/10/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/10/2024 03:14
The State of California has hundreds of fault lines running throughout it, and each year, roughly 500 earthquakes can be felt throughout the state. While some areas and certain faults have a higher chance of earthquakes than others, the risk anywhere in California is high when compared to most areas of the country. For that reason, preparedness is key.
This month UC San Diego will mark the Great California Shakeout Earthquake Drill on October 17, which is also the 35th anniversary of the Loma Prieta earthquake, the strongest earthquake to hit the area since the San Francisco earthquake of 1906.
"It's important to be prepared for earthquakes, especially in California," said UC San Diego Director of Life Safety and Emergency Preparedness David Ott. "Sign up for Triton Alert emergency notifications and become familiar with campus emergency response procedures. Anyone can take steps now to increase safety before, during and after an earthquake."
In preparation for an earthquake
Create an emergency supply kit, including food, water, medicine and personal hygiene items.
Assess your space. Consider how you could improve safety by securing objects that might fall, overturn, or slide during shaking. Examples include:
Take a moment to download the MyShake app. Earthquake Warning California is the country's first publicly available, statewide warning system that could give California residents crucial seconds to take cover before you feel shaking.
When shaking is felt
Drop under a desk, table, or stairwell or move against an interior wall.
Cover your head with your arms.
Stay away from big windows, shelves, or tall room partitions.
Remain under cover and hold on until the movement subsides.
When shaking stops
If on campus, evacuate the building. Assemble at your designated area and wait for instructions from emergency personnel.
Report missing persons and ruptured utilities to emergency personnel immediately.
Planning for Emergencies
Business Continuity Plans detail what a department needs to perform or resume essential functions during the response and recovery phase of an incident, including earthquakes, wildfires, flooding, power outages, hazardous material spills or gas leaks.
"Business Continuity Plans are an important element of preparing campus for an earthquake or other emergencies," said UC San Diego Emergency and Mission Continuity Manager Dismas Abelman. "Creating a plan and updating it annually helps the university continue its mission of teaching, research, public service and patient care, despite adverse events."
For assistance or more information, please contact the Emergency Management & Business Continuity Team at [email protected] or (858) 295-9819.