MALIBU—As part of its ongoing emergency preparedness efforts, Malibu conducted a multi-agency earthquake exercise on January 19 at Malibu City Hall based on the scenario of a massive earthquake that would strike the Los Angeles area.

“If a massive earthquake strikes the Los Angeles County area, Malibu could be isolated and without water, electricity, communications and help from responding agencies for days, so we have to do everything we can to be prepared to be self-sufficient,” said Mayor Bruce Silverstein. “It is crucial that community members, business owners, students, employees and organizations in Malibu work on their emergency plans and supplies so we can all be ready and resilient.”

The scenario was based on “The Big One,” a 7.8 earthquake that seismic experts think will at some point strike on the San Andreas Fault. The exercise looked at impacts, responses, needs, challenges and procedures that all of the agencies responding to a massive earthquake would experience in Malibu.

The city of Malibu reported on its website, days after the exercise on January 25, a 4.2 earthquake and several aftershocks struck off the coast of Malibu. While no damage was reported, the region was in immediate contact with the County Office of Emergency Management, coordinated with County agencies to conduct damage assessments and developed public messaging about the potential danger of falling rocks in canyon roads in light of several rockslides that transpired during recent rains.

One of the main goals was to ensure that partner agencies were familiar with, in contact with, and collaborating with each other and the city, and are aware with Malibu’s specific hazards and community characteristics.

City staff and Public Safety Commissioners were joined by participating agencies including the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s, Fire and Public Works Departments, CHP, Caltrans, LA County Metro, Pepperdine University, HRL, Malibu Community Emergency Response Team (CERT), West Basin Municipal Water District, Socal Gas Company, Southern California Edison, SM-MUSD, cell phone and Internet service providers, and others.

While a major earthquake on the San Andreas fault would not be expected to cause extensive structural damage in Malibu, the community could experience significant infrastructure disruption, loss of electricity, water, gas, phone and Internet service from damage within the city and outside of the city, and the loss of road access in and out of region.

The scenario was based on the Great Shakeout Scenario developed in 2008 by Dr. Lucy Jones of the U.S. Geological Survey and a group of over 300 scientists, engineers, and other experts. A 7.8 earthquake would cause massive, widespread damage across Southern California that would be far worse than that of the 6.7 Northridge earthquake in 1994. The 7.8 earthquake scenario projects more than 1,800 deaths, 50,000 injuries, $200 billion in damage (in 2008 dollars) and severe, long-lasting disruption to all sectors of the economy and communities.

An important takeaway of the exercise was the need for Malibu to increase efforts to engage the full community and incorporate all community resources into the City’s Emergency Operations Plan.

Information collected during the exercise will be used to create an earthquake playbook to help guide the region in the first days of a major, regional disaster, and will be incorporated into the update of the City’s Emergency Operations Plan this year.

For details on how to get prepared for earthquakes, visit: https://Ready.LACounty.gov/Earthquakes.