At
least 17 quake-related injuries have been reported, along with
two deaths associated with the magnitude 6.4 tremor, which
struck before dawn on Tuesday offshore Humboldt County, some 250
miles (400 km) north of San Francisco Bay.
Two elderly individuals counted as fatalities were determined to
have had pre-existing health conditions and died as a result of
medical emergencies they suffered during or just after the
quake, preventing life-saving care from reaching them in time,
the county sheriff's office said.
Property inspections also continued a day after the quake, with
at least 30 homes and a grocery store declared structurally
unsafe from quake damage, officials said.
Most of the damage occurred in the hard-hit town of Rio Dell,
whose 3,400 residents remained without running water on
Wednesday, the county sheriff's office reported. There were also
reports of multiple gas line ruptures, including one blamed for
a structure fire.
In the immediate aftermath of the quake on Tuesday, electricity
was knocked out to some 79,000 homes and businesses countywide,
but by Wednesday afternoon utility crews had restored power to
all but about 1,700 customers, according to the electric grid
tracking website PowerOutage.us.
The quake-battered bridge just outside the nearby town of
Ferndale and the main route into that community were still
closed as road crews continued making repairs.
Humboldt Sheriff William Hosnal proclaimed a local emergency on
Wednesday, allowing the county to seek state and federal
reimbursement for damage repairs and other disaster-related
costs. The cities of Eureka and Rio Dell have done likewise.
On Tuesday night, California Governor Gavin Newsom declared a
state of emergency for Humboldt County to support emergency
response efforts there.
Humboldt County, a largely rural area a two-hour drive south of
the Oregon border, is known for its redwood forests, local
seafood, lumber industry and dairy farms. It also is a region
where seismic activity is not uncommon, though the latest quake
caused greater disruption than others in recent years.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Chris
Reese)
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