Los Angeles Times

Quake app lowers trigger

Changes were in the works before Thursday shaker

- By Giulia McDonnell Nieto del Rio

After the 6.4 magnitude earthquake that struck Southern California on Thursday, Los Angeles will lower the notificati­on threshold on its ShakeAlert­LA app, alerting users when temblors of at least a 4.5 magnitude occur, the United States Geological Survey and Los Angeles city officials said Friday.

City officials have been in conversati­ons with USGS about lowering the threshold for several months, and began procedures to implement the change about two weeks ago, said Jeanne Holm, senior technology advisor to Mayor Eric Garcetti. Holm expects that the app will be updated by the end of the month.

“We have already done the planning to lower the threshold,” Holm said. “We will continue with thor

ough testing to make sure that the threshold is set correctly.”

The app, released in early 2019, is meant to give residents in Los Angeles County a warning when an earthquake reaches a magnitude of 5 and a level 4 or higher on the Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale. Depending how far a user is from the epicenter of the earthquake, the app has the ability to send out a push notificati­on before the user feels the shaking.

On Thursday, many users were worried that the applicatio­n was not working. People on social media denounced the app as a failure — but in fact, ShakeAlert was functionin­g normally, as city officials and USGS soon pointed out.

Thursday’s quake damaged homes and rattled nerves in Ridgecrest and other Mojave Desert communitie­s, and was felt as far away as Ensenada, Mexico. The shaking that hit Los Angeles, 125 miles away, did not reach level 4 on the Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale, and therefore no push notificati­on was sent to ShakeAlert users, said Robert de Groot from the Earthquake Science Center at USGS.

That’s because “shaking levels under 4 on the scale are not considered high enough to cause any damage,” said de Groot. At level 4, objects may fall off shelves and the shaking can become dangerous, USGS said. This did occur close to the epicenter of the earthquake, which was near Ridgecrest in the Mojave Desert, but Los Angeles County overall did not experience any significan­t damage.

Even if the magnitude threshold had been lowered for Thursday’s earthquake, a ShakeAlert notificati­on still would not have been activated, Holm said. The threshold for the Modified Mercalli Intensity Scale on ShakeAlert will not change.

The conversati­ons about testing the threshold are always ongoing, said de Groot, as the applicatio­n is recent and modificati­ons are still being made.

When an earthquake meets the criteria for a notificati­on, users get a push that starts with “earthquake, earthquake, expect shaking.”

City officials did not want people to become apathetic and stop responding to the alerts if the threshold was set too low, they said, which is why they initially set it for earthquake­s that were at magnitudes of 5.0 and higher. But they decided to change it, realizing that people would probably prefer too many notificati­ons than too few, Holm said.

“We are really interested in making sure that people are as safe as possible before during and after the earthquake,” she said.

 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? THE APP ShakeAlert­LA was rolled out early this year and is aimed at giving residents of Los Angeles County notice of quakes that meet certain criteria.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times THE APP ShakeAlert­LA was rolled out early this year and is aimed at giving residents of Los Angeles County notice of quakes that meet certain criteria.

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