Touring the Bluebird’hot zone’
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Cindy Frazier
State Sen. John Campbell came to Laguna Beach on Friday, offering to
do everything he could -- possibly including special legislation --
to assist those who have lost property in the devastating June 1
landslide in Bluebird Canyon.
Campbell plans to ask Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to include the
Bluebird Canyon incident in the existing declaration of emergency
that was issued during the destructive winter rains in the state.
That will pave the way for state and federal aid for slide victims
and a restoration effort.
“This is another part of that damage, it just took longer for it
to occur,” Campbell said.
Such a declaration -- expected to be announced this week -- would
give homeowners the possibility of applying for cash grants and other
aid. But government assistance probably won’t do a lot to restore
what has been lost, he acknowledged.
Campbell called the Bluebird Canyon destruction “unique.”
“Compared to other natural disasters, this one is different,
because some people have lost not just their homes, but actually lost
their land. Lots have vanished. It’s a unique situation.”
The senator, who toured the landslide “hot zone” with reporters,
city officials and members of the Office of Emergency Services, said
he is convinced that nature, not humans, caused the destruction in a
portion of the canyon neighborhood.
Some in the area have blamed a single, large home -- built but
never occupied -- at 925 Oriole Drive, claiming the huge construction
project undermined the area’s geology.
“That is not the case,” Campbell said after alighting from a
helicopter tour of the canyon. “From the air, it is patently obvious
from the large area of destruction that it did not originate from a
single source. It appears [the slide] was caused by the second
highest amount of rainfall ever recorded in the area.”
The concrete home sits high above the street but is visibly
cracked. City officials, who never certified it for occupancy, say
the landslide has eliminated any possibility the home can be lived in
without substantial repair.
Reporters and camera people, including several TV news crews,
eagerly followed Campbell into the “hot zone” -- out-of-bounds for
anyone but safety personnel -- on foot for a rare close-up look at
the center of the destruction on Flamingo Road.
Here, homes were cantilevered over the road, which at points
buckled like a ribbon and at other spots tore away like shredded
fabric. SUVs hung on to the edge of the asphalt, and homes appeared
topsy-turvy as if the rules of gravity no longer applied.
Utility poles lay on the streets or leaned against manicured
homes, some of which were cracked laterally and others shifted off
their foundations.
One bizarre sight was a sewer main with manhole cover which
protruded from the street more than a foot high.
The tour illustrated the extreme danger that residents were in and
how miraculous it was that no one was seriously injured or killed.
One couple apparently rode the landslide downhill as they ate
breakfast, then managed to escape after they came to rest.
Campbell said he was particularly moved by stepping into a home
and seeing toast and glasses of orange juice still sitting on an
intact breakfast table. But the rest of the house was destroyed, the
floor severely buckled.
“The degree of upheaval is really stunning,” he said.
Campbell defended Bluebird Canyon homeowners against critics who
have said that they don’t deserve government help to compensate them
for the loss of their multimillion-dollar properties.
“They may have been millionaires because of the value of their
homes, but now their houses are gone and they can’t afford to come
back,” he said. “I love this area, I love Laguna, and just because
you have earthquakes, fires and landslides doesn’t mean you shouldn’t
live here.”
Geologist Pam Irvine, who works with the Office of Emergency
Services, said the state will be conducting tests to determine the
exact cause of the slide and help city officials to monitor the area
for possible further movement.
To monitor the area, bore holes will be drilled at various points
in the ground, and inclinometers put in place to measure ground
movement.
Irvine said her preliminary assessment is that deep ground
saturation -- to a level of 60 to 100 feet -- caused the earth to
become so heavy that it buckled under its own weight, taking the
hillside with it.
Irvine said the area could continue to slide for weeks or months,
although it appears to have stopped for the time being.
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