home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: ca.earthquakes
- Path: sparky!uunet!europa.asd.contel.com!darwin.sura.net!wupost!csus.edu!borland.com!pfussell
- From: pfussell@borland.com (PaulFussell)
- Subject: Re: San Francisco Earthquake 89
- Message-ID: <1992Nov20.053042.18803@borland.com>
- Originator: pfussell@genghis.borland.com
- Sender: Paul Fussell
- Organization: Borland International
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 05:30:42 GMT
- Lines: 41
-
- Accompanying me to Atascadero were two elderly aunts, one of whom left
- her husband behind in Santa Cruz, and the other of whom lived in a trailer in
- Scotts Valley. Both were panicked. They tried calling, but nothing was
- getting through. Seemed to me it was time to go home.
-
- I talked them into getting into the car. ("What if we can't get through?"
- one complained. "We'll turn around and come back," I answered.) The drive
- back seemed to take forever, especially because one aunt kept spinning
- out fantasies about how bad it could be, and then starting to panic all
- over again. We finally got to Santa Cruz county, easy to identify because
- it was completely blacked out. Highway 1 was blocked (thank goodness--
- just past the blockage a bridge had collapsed and would have been disastrous
- to come on in the dark) and the Highway Patrol was redirecting traffic into
- Watsonville.
-
- The city looked like a war zone. Buildings were collapsed, fires were
- burning here and there, all lights were out, people were all over the
- place, rubble was in the streets, and the only way through it all was
- a circuitous route that wound around the rubble and fires. To add to
- the hazards, we almost got hit crossing an intersection when a low rider
- ran a stop sign at high speed. Seemed like the social structure
- had crumbled along with the buildings--who ever heard of a speeding
- low rider? :-)
-
- Anyway, the rest was anticlimactic--the one aunt's husband was fine (but
- worried as hell and happy to see his wife); the other aunt's trailer
- rode out the tremor without structural damage (although just about everything
- inside was jumbled up or broken on the floor); and my place in Scotts
- Valley just suffered cracks in the wallboard and the usual assortment
- of broken glasses and dishes.
-
- The real tragedy on this side of the hill was Santa Cruz--the Pacific
- Garden mall was gone, several people were dead, and hundreds were homeless.
- It didn't seem that the city I loved would ever be the same place again.
- And it isn't. It's three years later, and the downtown mall is just
- starting to get rebuilt. The last of the pavilions that housed most
- of the mall businesses came down this week, three years after these
- temporary structures went up with volunteer labor. Who ever thought at
- the time that these glorified tents would be up that long, or that
- some businesses still wouldn't be able to find space on the mall three
- years later?
-