How Community Groups Can Participate

West Coasters must get better prepared before the next big earthquake, and also practice how to protect ourselves when it happens. The purpose of the ShakeOut is to help people and organizations do both.

The boxes below describe how community groups can participate in the ShakeOut. With your participation, this may be our largest earthquake drill ever!

Not a Community Group?
Who is participating?
SHAKEOUT SPOTLIGHT

Responders checking OK signs in Vallecity Mobile Home Park

For the 2008 ShakeOut, over 98% of the senior residents of the Vallecity Mobile Home Park took cover for 3 minutes and then placed OK signs in their windows for volunteer responders to check. Several residents pretended to be injured, and the responders followed procedures in place for such emergencies. The residents participate in a similar drill every six months!

  • Invite everyone who matters to you to register for the ShakeOut.

  • Ask neighborhood businesses to display posters about ShakeOut in their windows and flyers at their counters.

  • Host a ShakeOut Block Party. Invite your neighbors over for tea and share preparedness information, exchange phone numbers, and create an inventory of special skills (search and rescue, first aid, equipment) and needs (elderly, children, pets, medication, etc.) in your community. Also, encourage everyone to register while there, especially those without internet access.

  • Encourage your community or employer to register for the ShakeOut as well, and to develop ShakeOut participation events.

PLAN YOUR DRILL

  • Today:   Register your group to be counted in the ShakeOut Drill, get email updates, and more.

  • Between now and 18 September:   Consider what may happen when an earthquake shakes your area. Plan what your group will do now to prepare, so that when it happens you all will be able to protect yourself and then recover quickly. Talk to other community groups about what they have done, and encourage them to join you in getting more prepared.


  • 18 September, 10:10 a.m.:
    1. Drop, Cover, and Hold On:   Drop to the ground, take Cover under a table or desk, and Hold On to it as if a major earthquake were happening (stay down for at least 60 seconds). Practice now so everyone will immediately protect themselves during earthquakes! (See this page for what to do if you are in bed, outside, driving, in a tall building, or other situations.) See this page for what to do if you have a disability or an activity limitation.)

    2. While still under the table, or wherever you are, look around and imagine what would happen in a major earthquake. What would fall on you or others? What would be damaged? What would life be like after? What will you do before the actual earthquake happens to reduce losses and quickly recover?

    3. Finally, your group can practice what it will do after the shaking stops.

GET PREPARED

What we do now, before the earthquake, will determine what our lives will be like after. The following are key actions from the Seven Steps to Earthquake Safety which has additional things you can do to prepare.

Also, Get Ready Get Thru has lots of information about preparing yourself and your family for a major natural disaster.

  • Do a "hazard hunt" for items that might fall in homes or offices during earthquakes and secure them. EQ-IQ has particularly good information about earthquake proofing your home.

  • Create a disaster-preparedness plan for your group.
  • Organize or refresh your emergency supply kits.
    • Store at least one gallon of water per person, per day, for 3 days and ideally for 2 weeks.
    • What else would you need to be on your own for up to 2 weeks?
    • What would you need if you are in your car or office when the earthquake strikes?
  • Identify your building's weaknesses. Ask a local earthquake retrofitting contractor for a free structural inspection of your home or building. Also, review your insurance coverage, whether home-owner or renter. The Earthquake Commission deals with claims relating to natural hazards and has information about insurance needs.

  • Create a game where everyone responds to a signal by practicing Drop Cover and Hold On. Talk to children about what to expect during and after an earthquake.

Designed by Weston/Mason©2012 SCEC Southern California Earthquake Center USC
West Coast ShakeOut