(LOS ANGELES) — Earthquakes have proven extremely hard to predict, but a new warning system in California may still help save lives the next time a big one strikes.
The Governor’s Office of Emergency Services said on Wednesday, the 30th anniversary of the Loma Prieta earthquake that devastated the Bay Area that it’s rolling out a Shake Alert system, which will deliver warnings through an app and through the same system used for Amber Alerts.
Residents will have between three and 10 seconds of lead time, which doesn’t sound like much, but it’s enough time for a doctor to remove a scalpel during surgery or to duck under a doorway.
“Think about it: We have a warning for hurricanes, tornadoes, other situations like cold-weather storms,” Ray Riordan, the emergency management director for the San Jose office of Emergency Management, told ABC San Francisco station KGO-AM. “Now we have a warning system for an earthquake.”
“We think we’re at a place where it’s not perfect, but we can keep people safe, and that’s our ultimate threshold,” he added.
The earthquake app, developed at the University of California, Berkeley is available for both iOS and Android platforms.
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