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Eleven Million Dollars of Damage and Seven Injuries: UCSC Survives the Quake From Its Own Backyard

CAearthquakeemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

At 5:04 PM PDT on October 17, 1989, a magnitude 6.9 earthquake struck the Loma Prieta area approximately 10 miles northeast of Santa Cruz, directly beneath the hills that border the UCSC campus. Seven minor injuries were reported at UCSC and the campus sustained $11 million in property damage, concentrated in the McHenry and Science Libraries where shelving collapsed. The campus cogeneration plant kept power on at UCSC while much of Santa Cruz County went dark, and most buildings were reopened for classes by the following Monday.

Alerts
3
Response
Killed
0
Injured
7
Institution
University of California, Santa Cruz
Public R1 · CA
~10,500 studentsUCSC Emergency Notification
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTPA System
Approximate reconstruction253 chars
Attention all campus community. A major earthquake has struck the Santa Cruz area. Please evacuate all buildings immediately. Do not use elevators. Proceed to open areas away from buildings and trees. Await further instructions from emergency personnel.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Earthquake struck at 5:04 PM PDT on October 17, 1989 -- at that time many students were watching Game 3 of the World Series between the Oakland A's and San Francisco Giants
The UCSC campus sits adjacent to the Forest of Nisene Marks State Park, only a few miles from the actual rupture zone at Loma Prieta peak
1989 campus-wide alert systems were primarily PA and phone-tree based; mass SMS and email alerting did not exist
UPDATEPA System
Approximate reconstruction405 chars
This is an update from UCSC Emergency Management. The campus has sustained damage to several buildings including the McHenry and Science Libraries. All buildings remain closed pending inspection. The campus cogeneration plant is providing emergency power to residential facilities. Students in residence halls should remain in place. Do not attempt to drive on Highway 17 -- road conditions are hazardous.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

UCSC's gas-powered cogeneration plant meant the campus had electricity while most of Santa Cruz County was blacked out -- a significant operational advantage
Highway 17 connecting Santa Cruz to the Silicon Valley was severely damaged and closed for weeks following the earthquake
The McHenry Library shelving collapses created thousands of volumes piled on floors -- cleanup alone was estimated at $1 million
ALL CLEARPhone
Approximate reconstruction366 chars
UCSC announcement: After structural inspection of campus buildings, the university will reopen for classes on Monday, October 23. The McHenry and Science Libraries will remain closed while cleanup and shelving repairs are completed. Students with library materials due should contact their instructors. Counseling services are available at the Student Health Center.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Campus reopened within one week of the October 17 earthquake -- remarkably fast given $11 million in property damage
Library closures persisted longer than classroom reopenings; the scale of book and shelving damage in McHenry required extended cleanup
1989-era notification relied on phone trees and posted notices rather than broadcast electronic messaging
Context

Background

UC Santa Cruz occupies a forested hillside campus above the city of Santa Cruz, California, just a few miles from the Forest of Nisene Marks State Park -- the epicentral area of the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. The magnitude 6.9 mainshock struck at 5:04 PM PDT on October 17, 1989, the precise moment much of the campus was watching Game 3 of the World Series on television. UCSC sustained $11 million in property damage and $1 million in cleanup costs, with the heaviest damage in the McHenry and Science Libraries, where shelving units toppled like dominoes and thousands of volumes were thrown to the floor. Seven people were treated for minor injuries on campus. Downtown Santa Cruz suffered far more severely, with portions of the historic Pacific Garden Mall collapsing and 63 deaths and 3,757 injuries across the broader Bay Area. UCSC's gas-powered cogeneration plant, located on campus, kept power flowing to residential facilities while most of Santa Cruz County experienced a total blackout -- a critical advantage for emergency communications and student welfare. The UCSC student oral history project, conducted in the immediate aftermath, captured firsthand accounts from students, staff, and faculty across campus locations. Most buildings were cleared for reoccupancy in time for classes the following Monday, October 23, though the libraries remained closed for cleanup and repairs. The earthquake spurred major seismic retrofitting programs across the UC system and became a foundational case study for campus emergency preparedness planning.
Analysis

Key Findings

UCSC's proximity to the Loma Prieta epicenter meant it was one of the closest major campus facilities to the rupture zone, yet the campus reopened within one week
The campus cogeneration plant provided electricity throughout the blackout, enabling emergency communications and residential services while Santa Cruz County went dark
McHenry and Science Libraries suffered the most visible damage: collapsing shelving units and thousands of displaced volumes requiring $1 million in cleanup alone
1989-era alert systems were PA-based and phone-tree dependent -- the earthquake became a catalyst for major improvements in UC system emergency notification infrastructure
Outcome
Seven minor injuries reported at UCSC; $11 million in property damage plus $1 million in cleanup costs. McHenry and Science Libraries sustained significant shelving collapses; chimney and fireplace damage in multiple buildings. Campus reopened for classes by Monday, October 23, 1989.
Provenance

Sources

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Tags
earthquakeloma-prieta1989californialibrary-damagecogenerationcampus-closurepa-systempre-modern-alertsuc-system
Added June 2026Updated June 2026Via ingestion