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- <text id=89TT2886>
- <link 90TT2757>
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- <title>
- Nov. 06, 1989: Now The Financial Aftershocks
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 06, 1989 The Big Break
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 21
- Now, the Financial Aftershocks
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The cleanup may top $10 billion, and the whole U.S. will pay
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church/Reported by Hays Gorey/Washingon and Lee
- Griggs/San Francisco
- </p>
- <p> At 5:04 p.m. last Tuesday, precisely a week after the
- devastating earthquake, church bells pealed throughout San
- Francisco to mark the city's survival and recovery. But a few
- churches declined to join in the commemoration, which had been
- requested by Mayor Art Agnos, because the reverberations from
- the tolling might have brought cracked belfries tumbling down.
- About 90 minutes after the clangor of the bells died out came
- the ominous rumbling of yet another aftershock, one of thousands
- that have done little discernible damage but are likely to keep
- rattling the nerves of residents for weeks.
- </p>
- <p> The sequence was almost too patly symbolic of the situation
- of San Francisco and its surrounding Bay Area. On the surface,
- the city had almost returned to normal. By subway under the bay,
- by ferry across it and by circuitous routes around the area, the
- vast majority of employees found their way back to reopened
- businesses, despite the continuing closure of the San
- Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge and two freeways. The colossal
- traffic jams that planners feared never developed. Tons of
- rubble from collapsed walls and shattered windows had been
- hauled off by a fleet of dumptrucks that came from as far away
- as Palo Alto (35 miles). Virtually all San Francisco streets
- were open, though yellow tape still closed off hundreds of
- sidewalks adjacent to cracked buildings that might yet collapse.
- The World Series resumed Friday night at Candlestick Park, and
- even the tourist business showed signs of revival. To prepare
- for a meeting of 5,000 plastic surgeons, the Moscone Convention
- Center was forced last week to evict 1,000 homeless people, who
- were shifted to Army barracks in the Presidio and to the
- helicopter carrier U.S.S. Pelileu, which served as a floating
- dormitory. By apt coincidence, the Society for Traumatic Stress
- Studies held its convention, as scheduled, in San Francisco
- last week.
- </p>
- <p> But the area was speckled with damage that will take weeks
- or even months to clean up and repair. The shattered portion of
- the I-880 freeway in Oakland will have to be torn down, and the
- Embarcadero Freeway, a double-decker that skirts downtown San
- Francisco, is riddled with cracks in the support columns.
- Officially, it is supposed to reopen next spring, but one
- structural engineer who has examined it says, "I'd never go
- back on that s.o.b. again. No matter how much they shore it up,
- there is no way to make it safe." Pier 45, the city's main
- fishing pier, was closed because inspectors found deep fissures
- running the length of the pier floor. With no alternative pier
- to sail from, the 150-boat commercial-fishing fleet has been
- idled just as the herring and Dungeness crab season was about
- to open. Other damage ranged from cracks in the paving of the
- main runway at Oakland International Airport to the rotting of
- 125,000 crates of strawberries at Watsonville, in the South Bay
- area, spoiled when electrical failure knocked out refrigeration
- equipment. And somewhere in Oakland 200 snakes and lizards,
- including a 6-ft. python, are at large, having escaped from
- twisted cages at the East Bay Vivarium. Fortunately, none are
- poisonous.
- </p>
- <p> The quake was far and away the costliest natural disaster
- in U.S. history in terms of dollars -- thankfully, not lives.
- The confirmed death toll reached 64, and seems very nearly
- complete. Only six people are still listed as missing; probably
- only one or two bodies, if any, remain to be dug out of the
- mangled cars on I-880. More than 3,000 people were injured and
- 14,000 made homeless. Estimates of property damage, however, are
- rising rapidly. The unofficial tally hit $7.2 billion last week,
- and is expected to top out somewhere between $10 billion and $12
- billion -- enough to produce a financial aftershock that will
- reverberate throughout California and the country.
- </p>
- <p> Only about one in five Bay Area homes was covered by
- earthquake insurance, and generally for only 85% to 90% of its
- value. (Earthquake insurance can cost as much as $800 a year
- for a $200,000 house.) Jack Byrne, chairman of Fireman's Fund,
- figures that insurers will eventually shell out $2.5 billion to
- repair earthquake damage. They stand to recover perhaps
- two-thirds of that from international reinsurers -- Lloyd's of
- London is the biggest -- which protect insurers against
- catastrophic losses. Still, the earthquake claims, coming less
- than a month after the devastation caused by Hurricane Hugo,
- could set off a chain reaction. Reinsurers might become
- reluctant to continue backstopping American insurers, which in
- turn would write fewer policies and raise premiums -- and not
- just on earthquake insurance.
- </p>
- <p> California, where America's tax revolt began in 1978 with
- Proposition 13 rolling back property levies, will have to
- consider a tax boost. The state has begun payments out of a $1
- billion emergency fund, but Governor George Deukmejian does not
- intend to drain that fund, and even if he did, more would be
- required. The Governor is expected to call the state legislature
- into special session in another week or so to decide how much
- more relief is needed and how to pay for it. It is hard to see
- how any significant amount could be made available without a
- hike in either sales or gasoline taxes. Deukmejian, who has
- taken a Bush-like antitax position, said last week that such a
- boost "would be a last resort."
- </p>
- <p> In Washington Congress quickly passed, and President Bush
- signed, a measure making $3.4 billion available to disaster
- victims, mostly in California; $2.85 billion of that will be
- new money. Legislators pointedly exempted the relief funds from
- the spending cuts mandated by the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings law,
- but, in a somewhat surprising burst of honesty, agreed to count
- them as part of the budget deficit. Though New York Democratic
- Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan asserted that the relief money
- will have to be made up by cuts in other programs, that is most
- unlikely, and no one in Washington will even whisper the T word.
- Most likely, the $3 billion, and more that California lawmakers
- warned they will request later, will be financed by simply
- running the money-printing presses a bit faster and making the
- budget deficit larger and more intractable.
- </p>
- <p> One way or another, and at whatever cost, the earthquake
- damage will be repaired. The bigger question is whether the Bay
- Area's prosperity will be affected over the long term. Though
- the region's economy is still growing, at least since 1983 it
- has fallen behind that of the Los Angeles area, and the Bay Area
- has lost relative importance as a financial, insurance and
- manufacturing center. It is too early to tell whether the
- earthquake will affect that trend, especially since the Los
- Angeles area is equally, if not more, vulnerable to the fearsome
- Big One.
- </p>
- <p> The Bay Area quake, officially known as the Loma Prieta
- Quake after a mountain perched almost atop the epicenter, was
- retrospectively upgraded last week to 7.1 on the Richter scale,
- vs. an original 6.9. Big all right, but still not the Big One.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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