120 Years After 1906: Preparedness Still Starts with Neighbors

As your new President of the Sunnyside Neighborhood Association, one of my core priorities is simple: improving the quality of life in and around Sunnyside through safety, preparedness, and community resilience.

That focus feels especially timely this week. On April 17, Axios San Francisco reflected on the 120th anniversary of the 1906 earthquake (April 18, 1906) and the hard lessons it taught our city about infrastructure, readiness, and what happens when communities are not prepared. One of the clearest lessons is that in any major disaster, neighbors will need to help neighbors, especially in the critical first hours before professional responders can reach everyone.

That is exactly why programs like NERT matter.

Yesterday, April 18, San Francisco Fire Department and NERT held their Spring Citywide Drill at the San Francisco Campus for Jewish Living, where more than 200 NERT volunteers came together for six hours of hands-on training and disaster-response practice. The drill itself was scheduled by SFFD as a citywide NERT training event from 8:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.

NERT, the Neighborhood Emergency Response Team, is San Francisco’s free community preparedness and disaster-response training program. Through NERT, residents learn personal preparedness, fire safety, light search and rescue, disaster medical skills, team organization, and emergency communications. SFFD describes it as a neighbor-helping-neighbor program, and that is exactly what makes it so valuable. It gives ordinary residents practical skills they can use to protect themselves, support their families, and assist their blocks and neighborhoods when the next emergency comes.

Preparedness is not abstract. It is local. It is personal. And it is one of the strongest ways we can improve the quality of life here in Sunnyside. A safer neighborhood is one where people know each other, train together, communicate effectively, and are ready to respond when conditions are at their worst.

Nob Hill NERT Coordinator Winnie (left) and NERT/ARC member Barb from Dolores Park @ 2026 Spring Drill

I also want to recognize the members of SF ARC (Amateur Radio Club) who are also members of NERT and who ran Comms Net-Control during the drill. Their work helps ensure that volunteers are not only trained in theory, but are actually practiced and competent in the communications discipline that becomes essential in a disaster. NERT’s own graduate communications training emphasizes Net Control as a critical skill for managing radio traffic safely and effectively in emergency operations.

If you live or work in San Francisco, I strongly encourage you to learn more about NERT and consider joining. It is one of the best ways to build both personal readiness and neighborhood resilience.

Learn more about NERT: SFFD NERT Overview
Sign up for training: Join NERT

Preparedness is one of the most practical forms of community care. One hundred twenty years after 1906, that lesson still holds.

Michael Kelly is the Sunnyside NERT neighborhood coordinator, and the SFFD Battalion 9 NERT Coordinator; he can be reached via email nert.sunnyside@gmail.com, radio call sign KO6EZE, or via phone at (650) 877-2447

Recent Fire Safety Fair by Sunnyside Community Connectors

Sunnyside Community Connectors recently held a Fire Safety and Emergency Preparedness Fair. More about this community organization here: https://www.facebook.com/CommunityLivingCampaign/

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Supervisor Yee (center), Lt. Jonathan Baxter, SFFD (fourth from left), Michael Wong, CYC Program Director (third from left) and the Community Youth Center staff

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Mary Notch,  Product Safety Investigator, US Consumer Product Safety Commission, and Inspector Darrel Stone, SFFD.

Continue reading “Recent Fire Safety Fair by Sunnyside Community Connectors”

Jan 15: Fire Safety and Emergency Preparedness Fair at Sunnyside

Fire Safety and Emergency Preparedness Fair on Wednesday January 15th, 11 AM – 2 PM, at 419 Hearst Avenue (Edna).

Sponsored by Sunnyside Community Connectors. Educational material, demonstrations, and free giveaways of smoke alarms and handcrank flashlight-radios.

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SNA Quarterly Meeting Summary, Nov 2019

Sunnyside Neighborhood Association held its quarterly meeting last night. Here is a summary. Many thanks to our speakers at the final meeting of 2019.

Highlights of the meeting included:

Announcements

  • SNA elections in February, 2020. Please consider running for office!
  • Come to the senior exercise program at St. Finn Barr, Monday and Wednesdays at 9:30am
  • The SNA holiday party will be on Sunday, December 8 at the Sunnyside Conservatory

Continue reading “SNA Quarterly Meeting Summary, Nov 2019”

SF Examiner: ‘Report: Large parts of SF “not adequately protected” from fires after major earthquake’

Areas impacted by Grand Jury report include parts of District 7. From SF Examiner. Source: https://www.sfexaminer.com/news/report-large-parts-of-sf-not-adequately-protected-from-fires-after-major-earthquake

READ FULL ORIGINAL REPORT HERE. 


Report: Large parts of SF ‘not adequately protected’ from fires after major earthquake

Civil grand jury urges expansion of emergency firefighting water system

JOSHUA SABATINI

Sep. 22, 2019 1:30 a.m.

San Francisco’s high-pressure fire-fighting water system protects some of the densest neighborhoods but large parts of The City are not covered by it, leaving residents “inadequately protected” from blazes after a major earthquake.

A recent civil grand jury report, “Act Now Before It Is Too Late: Aggressively Expand and Enhance Our High-Pressure Emergency Firefighting Water System,” raised the alarm about the lack of coverage for neighborhoods like the Sunset, Richmond and Bayview.

Stephen Garber, who served on the civil grand jury, said that “to have large areas of The City not adequately protected is simply wrong.”

“This is not a new issue. The City has known about it for years. We are not criticizing anybody in the past, but the question is how quickly can we act and what can we do now,” Garber said during Thursday’s Board of Supervisors Government Audit and Oversight Committee hearing on the report.

The Auxiliary Water Supply System, also known as the Emergency Firefighting Water System, dates back to 1913 and was installed in response to the fire following the Great Earthquake of 1906. The San Francisco Public Utilities Commission operates the independent system, which delivers water at high pressures, comprising 135 miles of pipeline and 150 cisterns. Continue reading “SF Examiner: ‘Report: Large parts of SF “not adequately protected” from fires after major earthquake’”