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$5M in federal funds OK’d for quake warning system

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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Lucy Jones, senior adviser for risk reduction for the U.S. Geological Survey, describes how an early warning system would provide advance notice of an earthquake, at a news conference in the Seismological Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Calif.

PASADENA, Calif. >> California has received a spurt of federal funding to expand an earthquake warning system intended to provide enough time for trains to brake, utilities and factories to shut off gas lines, and people to dive under a table until the shaking stops.

But the money is far short of what’s needed to finish the job statewide.

California trails Japan, Mexico and other earthquake-prone areas in developing a public alert system, which ideally would provide several seconds of warning after a fault ruptures.

Scientists have tried to make the public alert system, now in pilot stages, more widely available, but money has been a problem. A joint statement Monday from Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., and U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Burbank, said $5 million had been set aside to continue the work as part of a spending bill approved by Congress.

Feinstein called it "a down payment." By some estimates, a statewide system could cost $80 million. Scientists would like to install hundreds of sensors to pick up vibrations along big faults, like the San Andreas.

Schiff told reporters in Pasadena that the reluctance to fully finance the system was "inexplicable, given how much is at stake."

The funding will expand a limited program developed by the California Institute of Technology; the University of California at Berkeley; and the University of Washington, in conjunction with the U.S. Geological Survey.

Seismic early warning systems are designed to detect the first shock waves from a large jolt, calculate the strength and alert people before the slower but damaging waves spread.

The systems can’t predict quakes and are most useful during big events where it would be meaningful to warn people far away, scientists said.

Several moderate earthquakes this year in Southern California produced successful early warnings. Officials testing the system in San Francisco got eight seconds of warning before strong shaking arrived from the 6.0-magnitude earthquake near Napa in August.

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