Los Angeles Times

7 weeks of quakes have Alaska on edge

Aftershock­s from a magnitude 7 temblor last year continue, rattling residents young and old.

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ANCHORAGE — Seven weeks after a massive earthquake rocked Alaska, aftershock­s are still shattering 7year-old Connor Cartwright’s sense of safety.

They shake the earth far less than the magnitude 7 quake that sent a mirror, TV and dishes crashing to the ground in the Anchorage home where Connor lives with his mother, father and 11-year-old brother.

But the seemingly neverendin­g aftershock­s deepen quake anxiety for the second-grader and many other Alaska residents in the wide swath of the state shaken by the Nov. 30 quake.

When the big aftershock­s hit, Connor fears his home will collapse.

“I feel like the house won’t hold up,” he said.

Many of the aftershock­s are so small that people don’t notice them, like a recent one that Connor didn’t feel at school — but his teacher made all the students dive under their desks to be safe.

The latest big aftershock happened last Sunday — a magnitude 5 jolt that flared already frayed nerves and prompted panicky posts on social media.

That one “reminded people again that it’s not over yet,” said seismologi­st Natalia Ruppert at the Alaska Earthquake Center.

There have been more than 7,800 aftershock­s since the main earthquake struck 7 miles north of Anchorage, the state’s most populous city. Most were too small to feel, but 20 have had magnitudes of 4.5 or greater. Ruppert expects the temblors to continue for months, although the frequency has lessened, from about 200 daily to a couple of dozen a day.

With no end to the seismic action in sight, Laura Dykes said her upcoming vacation trip to Las Vegas will be a huge relief from the stress she now experience­s. The Anchorage law firm worker still has vivid memories of her basement office in a building swaying back and forth during the November earthquake. It was built on rollers to protect it from seismic events.

“I can’t get out of here fast enough,” Dykes said. “It’ll be five days I can get sleep.”

The earthquake buckled roads, and some homes and buildings sustained heavy damage, with initial estimates of damage and other costs about $100 million.

But most parts of Anchorage and other areas escaped the type of widespread catastroph­ic damage that happened in a devastatin­g 1964 earthquake, in part because of strict building codes that were put in place after that quake, which had a magnitude of 9.2 and is the second most powerful ever recorded.

No deaths or serious injuries were reported after the quake seven weeks ago, but federal officials soon declared a public health emergency and mental health aid was made available for people traumatize­d. School counselors were swamped and crisis counselors were brought in from Oregon to help at several Anchoragea­rea schools. Therapists and other profession­als struggled to meet demand from a nervous public.

Mental health providers say the rush of new patients has slowed, but they still treat clients rattled by the aftershock­s, which strike without warning or any apparent pattern.

“It’s overwhelmi­ng for people, and they feel emotionall­y out of control,” said Deborah Gonzales, a licensed clinical social worker in Anchorage.

Gonzales said people tell her they can’t stand the shaking and don’t feel safe anywhere. Some are considerin­g moving out of state, while others say they feel “crazy” — feelings Gonzales called “100% normal.”

For Connor, every noticeable shake triggers feelings of vulnerabil­ity, said his mother, Tamra Cartwright, adding that many of her friends’ children also struggle with quake-related fears.

She said her husband was at work when the November quake struck, but she and her sons ran out of the house and hugged one another as they huddled together. Along with broken family items, the only damage to their home was an existing hairline wall crack that was made wider. But Connor couldn’t sleep in his own bed for weeks and only just returned to it.

His mother said she “totally” hates the aftershock­s, but tries to “be strong for my kids.”

Lifelong Alaskan Robert Bell was 12 during the 1964 earthquake. The recent quake and its aftershock­s have been like reliving that youthful experience over and over, Bell said. His heart races when the aftershock­s hit.

“You don’t know when the next one’s going to hit — that’s been unnerving,” he said.

They’re also unsettling for Ethel Sechlera. But the Anchorage supermarke­t cashier considers them a way for the ground to let out seismic pressures. “I’d rather have the little aftershock­s to keep from having the big one hit,” she said.

Others shrug off the aftershock­s as part of daily life in the most seismicall­y active region of the U.S.

“I guess I’m a special kind of case because I don’t really mind it so much,” said Isaiah Sagayo. “I just continue on.”

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