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Victims of the Northridge earthquake may be allowed to reopen their claims, the chair of the Assembly Insurance Committee said Thursday. Assemblywoman Jackie Speier released an attorney general's ...
People's memories of the Jan. 17, 1994 Northridge earthquake are crystal clear, even though they are from 30 years ago. Skip to content. All Sections. Subscribe Now. 57°F.
LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- Jan. 17, 1994 was a day that shook the core of Los Angeles. When the 6.7 magnitude Northridge earthquake struck at 4:30 a.m., it wiped out buildings and bridges, leaving ...
As leaders shift to cleanup/rebuild mode in the wake of the devastating fires, the anniversary of one of L.A.’s worst disasters passes this week — and possibly useful lessons echo anew.
4:31 a.m.: A 6.7-magnitude earthquake strikes in the San Fernando Valley region of Los Angeles. 4:40 a.m.: Fires, flooding, and collapsed buildings are reported across Southern California. In Los ...
O n Jan. 17, 1994 the Northridge earthquake struck Southern California early in the morning. ... 1994, at one of many water lines set up in the area to assist victims of the Northridge earthquake.
Since the 6.7 magnitude Northridge earthquake that struck the San Fernando Valley on Jan. 17, 1994, the Los Angeles County Fire Urban Search and Rescue teams have been called to national and ...
When the Northridge earthquake struck the San Fernando Valley in the early hours of Jan. 17, 1994, Craig Renetzky and his family were asleep at home in Reseda three miles from the quake’s epicenter.
The Northridge Earthquake in Southern California happened just one year earlier, in 1994. The two events killed 6,400 people, injured 45,000, and left a half million people homeless.
On Jan. 17, 1994, at 4:31 a.m. a blind reverse-thrust fault ruptured 9 miles beneath the Los Angeles neighborhood of Northridge. In less than 20 seconds, the 6.7-magnitude quake damaged more than ...
The 4:31 a.m. jolt hit Los Angeles from 11 miles deep, shaking the city from its slumber with a temblor that would kill 57 people, injure 9,000, topple freeways, ignite fires, set off landslides and ...
As leaders shift to cleanup/rebuild mode in the wake of the devastating fires, the anniversary of one of L.A.’s worst disasters passes this week — and possibly useful lessons echo anew.