More Bluebird homes fine to occupy
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Cindy Frazier
Families of 18 evacuated residences on the periphery of the Bluebird
Canyon landslide were told the good news Monday that they can return
to their homes.
Also, two red-tagged homes -- deemed too dangerous to enter
without an escort -- were upgraded to “yellow” status, meaning that
the owners may enter them but may not spend the night.
The action came after city officials determined that an earlier
report of movement on Madison Place was in error, and that the area
is stable.
On Friday morning, city officials warned homeowners of a possible
new landslide in Bluebird Canyon, and also downgraded the status of
some homes. Officials revised their findings by 4 that afternoon,
after a recheck of inclinometers installed in the area to measure
earth movement.
“Additional monitoring since Friday and today indicates no
movement at the surface or at depth,” Hannes Richter, city geologist,
said Monday.
Six inclinometers have been installed around the landslide, and
four more will be put in this week on Flamingo Road, in the middle of
the slide zone.
Richter said the erroneous reading was attributed to an anomaly in
the inclinometer at a depth of 20 feet, unrelated to any movement of
earth.
The inclinometers consist of plastic pipe, 3 1/2 inches in
diameter, which are set into boreholes 100 feet deep in the soil. The
pipes have vertical grooves down their length, and the measuring
instrument lowers down the middle of the pipe with wheels that sit in
the grooves. The instrument measures the alignment of the pipes to
indicate any movement in the soil.
The first drilling directly into the slide zone was conducted
Monday morning, Richter said.
Richter said that Sunday’s 5.6-earthquake near Anza, felt
throughout much of Southern California, did not cause any further
sliding at Bluebird Canyon.
The homes certified for reoccupancy on Monday are: 963 Oriole
Drive; 910 and 916 Bluebird Canyon Drive; 1007, 1095, and 1096
Flamingo Road; 1095 and 1099 Dyer Place; 1020, 1034, 1046, 1051,
1056, 1089, 1061, 1070, 1080 and 1081 Madison Place.
Six homes may be certified as safe for reoccupancy on Monday, June
20 with geotechnical approval. They are: 959 and 919 Oriole Drive; 930 and 940 Bluebird Canyon Drive; 1021 Didrikson Way; and 1015
Flamingo Road.
On Friday, Bob Burnham, the newly hired community recovery
coordinator, said his office will be meeting with affected families
to assess their needs.
“We will profile every resident to give appropriate assistance,
and to match resources with the needs of impacted residents,” Burnham
said.
Also on Friday morning, City Manager Ken Frank told residents of
the worst-affected properties not to expect to get back into the
slide-devastated area for at least two years.
That’s the least amount of time it will take to determine how to
stabilize the hillside.
Answering a question posed by one woman, “When will we get back
our lives,” Frank said the next step will be to “winterize” the
canyon so it won’t slip during next year’s winter rains.
City officials must assess the cause of the slide and decide what,
if anything, can be done to make the area safe for rebuilding.
“Things are moving faster than in the first Bluebird Canyon
landslide [in 1978], but we need to handle the slope and the stream,
and get the area winterized, and then in the spring see what can be
done,” Frank said.
“The best case would be that you could start rebuilding in two
years.”
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