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- <text id=94TT0119>
- <link 94XP0542>
- <link 94TO0146>
- <title>
- Jan. 31, 1994: Los Angeles:Tales Of The City
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 31, 1994 California:State of Shock
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CALIFORNIA, Page 40
- Los Angeles:Tales Of The City
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In the aftermath of a 30-second earthquake, Angelenos wake up
- to anxious, sometimes off-kilter episodes in their lives
- </p>
- <p>By David Van Biema--Reported by Georgienne E. Bradley, Patrick E. Cole, Jeanne McDowell,
- Johanna McGeary, Sylvester Monroe, Edwin M. Reingold/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> Diane Stillman is watching a very large dresser with attached
- mirror hurtle toward her across her bedroom. Having lived in
- Los Angeles all her life, the 43-year-old paralegal knows she
- is in an earthquake. And she herself isn't hurt. What worries
- her is her mother, 83 and legally blind, living several blocks
- away. The trick, once Diane gets out from under the dresser,
- is leaving her apartment in the Northridge Meadows complex in
- L.A.'s San Fernando Valley and making sure her mother is all
- right. As Stillman crosses her bedroom, she thinks, this must
- have been a big one. Nearly everything in the apartment is on
- the floor. Then she hears a crack, and her dining area seems
- to list to the left and downward. "I felt a sensation of falling,"
- she reports later. She is falling--10 ft.--and so is her
- apartment. And the building's entire second and third floors.
- "But until I actually saw what was on the outside," she says,
- "I really was not aware that it had totally crushed the first
- floor."
- </p>
- <p> If one were looking for the best metaphor for last week's earthquake,
- its power and ruthlessness, one could hardly do better than
- this brute subtraction: at 4:30 a.m. on Monday there was a three-story
- apartment building. Younger people lived on the second and third
- floors; the older folks tended to live downstairs so as not
- to climb steps. At 4:31 it was a two-story apartment building,
- with all the carnage that suggests.
- </p>
- <p> If this was just Atlas' shrug, one would hate to see the shimmy.
- If this was not the Big One, then it is almost impossible to
- imagine what that would be like. In the aftermath of 30 seconds
- on Monday, at least 55 people died. Local mountains may have
- risen more than a foot. Nine highways snapped like twigs. An
- oil main and 250 gas lines ruptured, igniting an untold number
- of fires. So many wires fell down and circuits blew that 3.1
- million people were plunged into total darkness. Water was denied
- to 40,000. There were more than 1,000 aftershocks, some considerable
- tremors in their own right. And the future of the country's
- second largest city as well as that of its citizens was forever
- altered.
- </p>
- <p> John Karmelich is on the WELL, just three hours after the quake.
- The phone lines left standing now are overloaded with calls
- from frantic friends and relatives in other parts of the country,
- most unable to get through. The exceptions are those on computer
- bulletin boards like the WELL, which can be accessed through
- local numbers. Karmelich, whose log-on is "Morngman," lives
- in northwest Orange County. To thousands of fellow hackers,
- he reports, "Shakin' all over, but basically everything is O.K."
- </p>
- <p> Al McNeill is in his yard, in front of what was once his house.
- The house was on Balboa Boulevard just north of the 118 freeway,
- a few miles from Northridge Meadows. Moments after the first
- upheaval, Al's son David smelled gas. Before he could turn off
- their line, a man in a pickup truck out front tried to start
- his engine. "There was a huge explosion," says David. A fireball
- leaped 50 ft. in the air and then consumed the McNeill home
- and two others across from it. The same thing was happening
- all up and down the block, just as the local water mains were
- breaking. Later, people remarked on the peculiarity of seeing
- floods and flames in one and the same place. The McNeills managed
- to save their pug-dog and their 1964 Austin Mini. "We were pretty
- well prepared for an earthquake," says Al, looking tired. "But
- not the fire."
- </p>
- <p> Andrea Donnellan is enjoying what she calls "the ride." A 29-year-old
- geophysicist at the California Institute of Technology's Jet
- Propulsion Laboratory, she published an interesting paper last
- November--one that called for a 6.4 Richter scale earthquake
- on the Oak Ridge fault line. She moved back to California from
- Maryland to experience it. Later today she feels deep compassion
- and some guilt and attains a degree of local fame. But right
- now, as she sits in her bed in Altadena, counting the frequency
- and duration of the shocks, all she can think is, "I'm so glad
- I'm here for this!"
- </p>
- <p> Ladonna Hamilton is stacking equipment in front of the Needham-Kurtz
- beauty salon. If the riots ruined one of L.A.'s poorer sections
- and the fires singed some of its wealthier enclaves, the earthquake
- has done its worst damage to the middle class. Ventura Boulevard
- is a main drag of the San Fernando Valley, as in Valley Girl.
- And Ventura is a mess. The windows of the Casa de Cadillac are
- blown out. The Fred Sands Realty building is partly rubble.
- Just to the north, stucco houses are cracked like broken eggs.
- Most of the dead will be in the Valley. As for the Needham-Kurtz
- shop--"manicures, pedicures, facials, waxing, makeup, massage"--it was first ravaged by fire and then drenched by the fire
- department. The owners, employees and some friends are pulling
- out the pink Leatherette chairs. Hamilton, a manicurist, is
- putting out displays of nail polish on the sidewalk. Reds. Oranges.
- Shocking pinks. She heard the store was burning from a friend
- who saw it on the news. She's wearing a black Needham-Kurtz
- T shirt. "It's completely gone," she says quietly.
- </p>
- <p> Arnold Sacco is having a heart attack. Sacco, 51 and white-haired,
- has made it to the parking lot of the Valley Presbyterian Hospital
- before collapsing. The lot has been serving as an emergency
- room ever since the quake's first shock tore into the hospital,
- followed shortly by the first wave of broken, bruised and shaken-up
- victims. A doctor runs to Sacco's side. There is a scream a
- few feet away. The critically ill man looks over to see a woman
- in the pain of advanced labor. "Go take care of the women having
- babies," he says, waving the doctor away. "They need more help
- than me." The doctor ignores him. Sacco dies. The baby is born
- healthy.
- </p>
- <p> Sakina Ellis is at work in her bright orange vest and hard hat.
- She is guarding a damaged stretch of the Santa Monica Freeway
- between Fairfax and La Cienega for Caltrans, the state transportation
- agency. Before her, a small army of gawkers takes in the freeway
- as if it were a huge, ugly sculpture--Monument to Human Vanity
- by Mother Nature. Ellis could probably have taken the day off;
- both her Van Nuys apartment and new BMW convertible were demolished
- this morning. But she is actually cheery, meditating on Martin
- Luther King Jr.: "Just think of all the damage that could have
- been done if it wasn't his birthday and people were going about
- their business as usual. He made this a better place. He saved
- souls."
- </p>
- <p> Robert DeFeo is grim faced. The L.A. city fire department battalion
- chief would like to be saving lives, but instead is filling
- and refilling the coroner's station wagon on perpetual duty
- in the driveway of Northridge Meadows. DeFeo's crew is using
- buzz saws and jackhammers and Swiss search dogs, and so far
- he has turned up nine corpses, each crushed while in bed. The
- coroner's car leaves but always returns. The heroics occurred
- earlier, when residents pried neighbors from tight spaces or
- let them down from the roof with knotted fire hoses. The place
- is crawling with reporters now from Seattle and New York City
- and Oslo. One asks DeFeo, "How would you describe what you've
- seen today, sir?" "Catastrophic," he answers flatly. "I haven't
- seen anything like it."
- </p>
- <p> Two hours later, the L.A. city fire department can finally save
- someone. Firemen extract maintenance worker Salvador Pena from
- a street sweeper he was operating in the now collapsed garage
- of the Northridge mall, not far from the Meadows. Some slabs
- of concrete are airlifted off him; others are pushed away with
- a huge inflatable bladder. The process takes about four hours;
- then he is free. His legs are crushed, but he will survive.
- Says a fireman: "It feels so good to get him out."
- </p>
- <p> Jack Wiggens is probing the nearby rubble of what was once a
- Bullock's. A structural engineer who serves on Mayor Richard
- Riordan's blue-ribbon panel on retrofitting city buildings,
- he believes that the Bullock's, which made up part of the mall,
- probably should have been retrofitted. Similar observations
- are being made by many regarding the numerous major highways
- crippled by the quake. After the area's last big temblor, in
- 1971, L.A. swore it would strengthen its freeway bridges. But
- costs slowed the project, and the legislature voted down a 2
- cents-per-gal. gas tax that might have goosed it along. Infuriatingly,
- I-10, the most important and hardest hit of the freeways, had
- been scheduled for retrofitting next month.
- </p>
- <p> Wiggens thinks he knows why Bullock's did not undertake improvements.
- "Some companies decide they can't afford it because of additional
- costs, such as the Americans with Disabilities Act, asbestos
- removal and sprinkler upgrades." Then he drops a bombshell.
- He has just come from Northridge Meadows, and that bothers him
- too. "That building had no plywood shear walls," he says. "It's
- a perfect example of a building that doesn't meet current codes."
- </p>
- <p> Immediately after the quake hit, city officials seemed less
- worried about such matters than about a repetition of the hooliganism
- accompanying the 1992 riots. Police chief Willie Williams instituted
- a dusk-to-dawn curfew and warned that looters would be prosecuted
- and jailed. Instead, in the first few days crime dropped 80%.
- Maybe people were too awed to loot anything but grapefruits
- from public parking lots. There was a treeful right here at
- the mall, and the quake has shaken them down prematurely, brilliant
- yellow polka dots on a gray field. A family rushes to the lot
- and collects as many grapefruits as it can in a bag.
- </p>
- <p> Roberto Barrera is out in the cold. "Todas las cosas en la cocina
- estan rotas," he says. Everything in the kitchen is broken.
- Shrouded in blankets, he is sitting on a brick fence across
- from Van Nuys High School. The school is putting people up,
- but he will not go indoors. As night falls and the temperature
- drops to 30 degrees, a rough rule has established itself: Anglos
- and blacks head for the shelters, while the fields and parks
- fill with Hispanics, mostly new immigrants, perhaps as many
- as 20,000. Many of them come from countries with a history of
- quakes and take no chances with aftershocks. There are grills
- with rice and beans; someone has a portable TV; a radio is playing
- Mexican pop. There is less panic here than among the Anglos,
- but more sadness. Yvonne Androver, 27, a cleaning woman, glances
- at her nephew Brando, age nine months. He is fast asleep, contented.
- She has been jolted back into her past: Guatemala in 1976. A
- 7.5 on the Richter scale. Twenty-three thousand people dead.
- "I remember all of it," she says. "The houses going down, the
- people crying."
- </p>
- <p> Bill Clinton is jerking up and down. For two days, he has postponed
- flying in from Washington, but even now two Richter 5.1 aftershocks
- startle his entourage at a "town meeting" he is holding at a
- Burbank airport. The news he has heard is bad. Broken freeways
- and the busted utilities cost a tremendous amount of money.
- The quake closed down 150 public schools, and there are worries
- about insurance coverage. It is a fact that 60% of the city's
- homeowners did not carry any. California Governor Pete Wilson
- has sent Clinton his estimated bill: between $15 billion and
- $30 billion. The latter amount would tie the quake with Hurricane
- Andrew as the most expensive disaster in American history. Wilson
- asked Clinton to pick up the entire tab, waiving laws requiring
- that state and local governments chip in as well.
- </p>
- <p> The President pledges $41 million for immediate highway repair
- and $639 million in low-interest small-business loans. He boasts
- that when told by a highway engineer it would take a year to
- repair I-10, he asked, "What do we have to do to fix it in less
- time?" And he assures his hosts, "We have no intention, none,
- of letting this be a short-term thing." Pause. Soon, he says,
- he and Budget Director Leon Panetta will "go back to Washington
- and figure out how to pay for it." He is smiling, but this is
- obviously not a joke.
- </p>
- <p> Diane Stillman is waiting. Having escaped the deathtrap of her
- building, she is waiting to be told how she will keep a roof
- over her head in the next few days, or weeks, or months.
- </p>
- <p> The 55 people recorded as having died in the quake constitute
- a higher toll than in the riots two years ago and far more than
- in last year's fires. The number will not climb much more. But
- Secretary of Housing Henry Cisneros has announced that many
- more houses were damaged than was first estimated. Thousands
- more people are homeless, and the weather report for the weekend
- predicts rain and temperatures in the 40s. Sanitary conditions
- and patience in the city's parks, parking lots and shelters
- are deteriorating, as people realize the long-term repercussions
- of their tragedies.
- </p>
- <p> Diane managed to get out of Northridge Meadows, helped down
- a ladder by a young man she didn't know. She found her mother
- Francine sitting amid her smashed belongings, thrilled to have
- recovered three pet cockatiels that escaped while her living
- room bucked and twisted. In four days, the two have lodged in
- a church, a Red Cross shelter and in the home of a generous
- couple in North Hollywood. Diane was buoyed by the reports that
- residents of Northridge Meadows would receive free lodging in
- a nearby apartment complex and that the Federal Emergency Management
- Agency would provide 18 additional months of rent vouchers.
- </p>
- <p> But those reports proved to be untrue. And standing in line
- with hundreds of others at FEMA's Tarzana office, Diane finds
- that the agency is not even prepared to begin processing her
- request for the smaller subsidies that actually are available.
- A clerk has just handed her a one-page application and her new
- appointment date--Feb. 12. No, she may not take home an application
- for her mother; the applicant must be physically present.
- </p>
- <p> "We're homeless," explains Diane to the clerk somewhat desperately.
- "What should we do between now and then?" And suddenly she learns
- the wages of survival. "That's just too bad," he answers. "Feb.
- 12. That's it."
- </p>
- <p> At the entrance to the FEMA building stand National Guardsmen
- with rifles. Yesterday angry applicants shouted and wagged their
- fingers in the faces of volunteers at the agency's Northridge
- branch. Diane merely looks exhausted. She will go to her Congressman's
- office to complain. Then she will go home. Or what is passing
- for home. Then? She says, "I don't know what else to do." Neither
- do thousands of others.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-