Los Angeles Times

ShakeAlert’s quake app performed horribly well

L.A. users got no warning this month, and that was by design

- By Emily Baumgaertn­er

More than 500,000 people have downloaded Los Angeles County’s new ShakeAlert­LA app to warn them of impending earthquake­s.

So when the two strongest earthquake­s in almost two decades hit Southern California this month, those residents were surprised by what they saw on their smartphone­s: nothing.

Officials were quick to explain to outraged app users that the shaking in the county wasn’t strong enough to trigger an alert.

But that rationale hasn’t mollified the public.

And the program’s inauspicio­us start has officials grappling with an existentia­l question that quake-prone countries such as Japan and Mexico have faced: Is it better to issue too many earthquake warning alerts or not enough?

“We’ve long treated citizens as people who need to be protected, rather than people we need to empower,” said David Eisenman, the lead scientist on the Los Angeles County Community

Disaster Resilience Project. “More informatio­n is always the way we need to go. It’s undeniable.”

Before the ShakeAlert­LA app was rolled out on New Year’s Eve, researcher­s spent a great deal of time debating the appropriat­e minimum threshold for alerts, U.S. Geological Survey seismologi­sts said. They decided to send alerts for quakes in L.A. County with a magnitude of at least 5.0, or quakes that occur anywhere and produce “light” shaking in Los Angeles.

But after the blowback that followed the Ridgecrest quakes July 4 and 5, officials agreed to lower the mark. By the end of July, the app will send alerts for local quakes with a magnitude of at least 4.5 and for any quake that results in “weak” shaking locally despite officials’ concern that too many warnings could lead to complacenc­y.

“We want you to see the alert and immediatel­y drop, cover and hold on,” said Robert de Groot, the USGS’ national coordinato­r for ShakeAlert. “If you see 30 of those a day, you’re either going to get incredible muscle tone and a core workout, or you’re going to stop reacting altogether.”

Striking a balance for effectiven­ess

At 8:19 p.m. July 5, shaking was detected by several USGS seismic sensors buried in concrete vaults along the West Coast. In real time, they used cellular and radio technology to transmit data to a processing center. There, an algorithm automatica­lly evaluated the informatio­n and determined that it fit the profile of an earthquake. An official ShakeAlert was generated — just 6.9 seconds after the first rumble.

“USGS writes the letter and puts it in the mailbox,” De Groot said. “It’s up to our partners, like the ShakeAlert­LA app, to pick the letter up and deliver it.”

But the USGS had instructed the app’s developers to deliver the message to L.A. County users only if the shaking there would be strong enough to cause significan­t damage: shelves toppling, people being thrown around, “your favorite decorative plate from Reno flying off the wall,” De Groot said.

That amount of shaking is considered level 4 on the Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale, which is different from magnitude. The city of Ridgecrest experience­d an intensity level of 8 after the 7.1 quake, causing heavy furniture to fall down and chimneys to crumble. Christmas Canyon reached an intensity level of 9, enough to shift buildings off their foundation­s.

But in most of L.A. County, where window blinds swayed and swimming pools sloshed, the intensity did not surpass level 3 — a degree of shaking the USGS describes as “similar to the passing of a truck.”

“Did the alert system fail people? That depends on what you consider a success,” said Caltech seismologi­st Lucy Jones, who specialize­s in science communicat­ion. “The system certainly did what it was programmed to do, so there’s the technical absolution. But then there’s the social issue — the human side of it all.”

There were plenty of humans who did not give ShakeAlert­LA a passing grade. “It failed the day I needed it most,” one critic said on Twitter. Another added: “I really expected more from this app.”

When it comes to handling the people factor, other quake-prone countries may have lessons to lend.

Japan’s Meteorolog­ical Agency establishe­d its Early Earthquake Warning system after the 1995 Kobe temblor that killed more than 6,000 people. That system includes thousands of sensors, compared with California’s approximat­ely 800 so far, Jones said. (Japan is about the size of California but has three times as many earthquake­s, she said.)

In 2011, the Early Earthquake Warning system automatica­lly signaled highspeed trains to slow down during the 9.1 Tohoku quake that struck off Japan’s east coast, helping prevent deadly derailment­s. It sent alerts through the national Japanese broadcaste­r NHK about 90 seconds before buildings in Tokyo began to sway. Cellphone warnings that buzzed in Sendai gave university students enough time to shelter under their desks during a lecture, said Richard Allen, director of the Berkeley Seismologi­cal Laboratory.

After public awareness campaigns explained the workings of the early warning system, more than threequart­ers of the Japanese public understood that false alarms were a possibilit­y, according to a study in Earthquake Spectra, a journal published by the Earthquake Engineerin­g Research Institute.

An erroneous alert of a magnitude 9 earthquake was sent in 2016, according to local media. Two years later, two minor temblors were mistakenly interprete­d to be a single, larger earthquake that triggered a warning of strong shaking that never came.

Still, 90% of citizens surveyed said they approve of the Japanese early warning system. About 75% of people who had been sleeping before a strong earthquake said they were woken by the alert, not the shaking, and the vast majority said the alert prompted them to take protective action.

ShakeAlert­LA could produce similar results, Jones said. “The instrument­s in the ground and the algorithms are essentiall­y the same in both countries,” she said. The difference lies in “how we distribute that knowledge.”

In Japan, earthquake­s are discussed not on the basis of their magnitude but according to their seismic intensity in a particular location, giving residents an idea of the shaking they should expect wherever they are.

In addition, the Yurekuru smartphone app allows residents to decide for themselves how bad the shaking has to be for them to receive an alert. (Complaints from some Los Angeles residents suggest that this would be a welcome feature for ShakeAlert­LA.)

Mexico developed its early warning system after the 1985 Mexico City quake that killed more than 9,000. That system feeds into SkyAlert, a smartphone app designed by a private company that alerts users to any quake in the country with a magnitude of at least 4.5. Premium users, who pay about $5 a year, receive notificati­ons when the shaking intensity at their location is expected to reach level 3, according to Alejandro Cantu, the company’s founder.

Yurekuru and SkyAlert have each been downloaded millions of times.

Weeks before a magnitude 7.1 earthquake struck central Mexico in 2017, a technician erroneousl­y sent an alert through the capital’s 12,000 sirens.

Still, researcher­s discovered that residents preferred the false alarm to having no warning before minor shaking arrived.

“People are remarkably tolerant of false alerts. When they got messages, they simply perceived it as the system working,” said Allen, who traveled to Mexico to evaluate public opinion immediatel­y following the temblor.

A report on the system by Allen and his colleagues put it this way: “There seems to be general acceptance of the technical limitation­s of the early warning system in exchange for some measure of peace of mind.”

Live test puts app through its paces

In Los Angeles County, seismologi­sts believe one way to address concerns of an oversensit­ive system is to find creative ways to convey warnings, such as tailoring the messaging on the alert for varying degrees of intensity.

For example, a nuanced alert that had read, “Be aware, weak shaking is expected,” before the July 5 rolling would have been more appropriat­e than a universal message that read, “Drop, cover, and hold on,” Jones said.

Though many users felt let down by the ShakeAlert­LA app, De Groot urged Southern California­ns to keep it on their phones. The Ridgecrest quakes were beneficial in that they allowed officials to test the program in a live setting, rather than an orchestrat­ed scenario. That’s how real problems are identified and solved — and how public trust will be rebuilt.

“I’ve seen some really interestin­g comments on Twitter, and hundreds of emails, which has been a joy,” De Groot said, with just a hint of sarcasm. “But the truth is, we don’t get opportunit­ies like this very often, to learn where people’s heads are, gauge public opinion, and rethink how it all plays out.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? CREWS REPAIR Trona Road on Saturday after this month’s quakes near Ridgecrest, Calif., which did not generate alerts on ShakeAlert­LA. Officials have agreed to lower the threshold for warning users of shaking.
Photograph­s by Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times CREWS REPAIR Trona Road on Saturday after this month’s quakes near Ridgecrest, Calif., which did not generate alerts on ShakeAlert­LA. Officials have agreed to lower the threshold for warning users of shaking.
 ??  ?? LOS ANGELES Mayor Eric Garcetti announces the launch of the ShakeAlert­LA app in January.
LOS ANGELES Mayor Eric Garcetti announces the launch of the ShakeAlert­LA app in January.
 ??  ?? A WORKER removes bricks from the damaged chimney of a house in Trona, Calif., on Saturday.
A WORKER removes bricks from the damaged chimney of a house in Trona, Calif., on Saturday.
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? JON GOEBEL is pastor of the quake-damaged New Hope of Searles Valley Foursquare Church in Trona, Calif.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times JON GOEBEL is pastor of the quake-damaged New Hope of Searles Valley Foursquare Church in Trona, Calif.

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