Return to Part I
In the city of Fremont, about 20 miles south of the Cypress collapse, Fire Chief Dan Lydon
had begun to set up the Emergency Operations Center with the help of the mayor and the
city manager a few minutes after the earthquake.
Mayor Gus Morrison was listening to a portable radio when he suddenly whirled and said
to the chief, "I just heard that the Bay Bridge has collapsed!"
"I said 'My God!' when I heard that," said Chief Lydon, "I then checked and found that
our city was not in serious trouble and I immediately went to the telephone to call Oakland
Fire Alarm, and they answered right away."
Chief Lydon knew that a portion of the Bay Bridge was within the city limits of Oakland,
and he also knew that years of budget cutbacks had left the Oakland department with just
seven understaffed ladder truck companies. His 25 years of experience in the fire service
also told him all of those truck companies would be needed for potential heavy rescue
operations on the Bay Bridge. He was not however yet aware of the disastrous collapse of
the Cypress Freeway.
When the call miraculously got through the overtaxed commercial telephone system at 5:25
p.m., Assistant Chief Baker was still not fully aware of the extreme magnitude of the
Cypress Freeway collapse himself, but had full knowledge that virtually all of Oakland's
fire companies had either already begun rescue operations at many places along the freeway
or were out of service on other major emergencies. There were no fire engines left.
Assistant Chief Baker quickly came to the telephone and said, "Danny, you're the first
outside person I've talked to since this thing hit. Every company is committed and we need
ladder companies quickly....
"I've known John for 30 years," said Chief Lydon, "and I could tell by the fright in his
voice that his department was in trouble, and I asked him if he was requesting mutual aid.
`Danny, call it want you want,' Chief Baker said, `just send me ladder companies! We
can't reach the [upper deck of the Cypress Freeway], the ground ladders won't get to it!' "
Fremont Mayor Morrison and City Manager Kent McClain gave instant approval to send a
ladder truck company to help Oakland. Chief Lydon also called other fire departments in
southern Alameda County to see if truck companies were available. There were none.
Assistant Chief Baker also asked Chief Lydon to contact the Contra Costa County
Consolidated Fire District and request ladder truck companies from them.
Oakland was quite fortunate that the city of Fremont was in a unique position to help and
had a mayor, city manager and a progressive fire chief who were more than willing to send
immediate help. First, there was little major damage in Fremont and, second, there was an
outpouring of off-
"We had two 100-
Fremont is also the only city in Alameda County that provides advanced life support on
fire engines, so Chief Lydon also sent six paramedic-
Under normal conditions Assistant Chief Baker's call for additional fire equipment to
Oakland, instead of going to Chief Lydon, should have been handed off to what is known
as a county mutual aid coordinator. This coordinator, as the title implies, coordinates
assistance to local fire departments within Alameda County.
The position was held by Chief John Sharry of the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory Fire
Department.
Chief Sharry wrote in his report, "At approx. 1740 hrs. [5:40 p.m.] we received a TAC
phone request from Fremont Fire...
But by 5:40 p.m., Oakland was stripped of fire engines and trucks by the enormous
number of emergency calls
For all practical purposes this major American city was without organized fire protection
when at 5:48 p.m.
"I contacted Oakland Fire Dispatch," he wrote, "via TAC phone to determine their needs.
Oakland requested that we send them anything we could spare. I informed them that I could
not deal with that kind of request. They needed to give me their needs in numbers.
"After some discussion, Oakland requested two Engine Strike Teams and two Truck Strike
Teams. I informed Oakland that Truck Companies were at a premium, but I would organize
the best available resources."
Each strike team was to be made up of five fire engines or five ladder trucks.
"I contacted Contra Costa County [Consolidated Fire District which adjoins Alameda
County to the east] to ask for an Immediate Response Strike Team to Oakland. Contra
Costa County informed me that they had already dispatched several Truck companies to
Oakland. They would try to put together an Engine Company Strike Team and would get
back to me." These were the ladder truck companies that had been earlier requested by
Chief Lydon of Fremont. Chief Sharry then dispatched Alameda County Task Force 14 to
Oakland, made up of apparatus from Lawrence Livermore Laboratory Fire Department,
Livermore City Fire Department as well as units from Pleasanton and the small community
of Daugherty, to Oakland.
This task force was certainly of some assistance, but given the magnitude of the disaster,
fell far short of the resources needed to sustain major rescue operations at the Cypress
Freeway. Assistant Chief Baker did, in fact, need "everything you can spare," and much
more, in a rescue operation that would ultimately require resources from the United States
Army, Navy, Marine Corps, the Air Force and fire departments as far away as Los
Angeles.
At 6 p.m., Battalion Chief Walden of the Walnut Creek Fire Department was told by Chief
Sharry to lead a Heavy Rescue Strike Team made up of San Ramon Ladder Truck No. 34
and Consolidated Fire District Ladder Truck No. 1 to Oakland. His strike team was
dispatched to 16th Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Way for a reported building collapse.
At 6:20 p.m., Professor Mahin arrived at the Cypress collapse to begin the investigation of
one of the greatest engineering disasters of modern times that had happened as he watched
from his office at the UC campus.
When Battalion Chief Walden's strike team stopped at a roadblock at San Pablo Avenue
and Martin Luther King Jr. Way, it was mistakenly directed by the Oakland Police
Department to the Cypress Command Post at West Grand Avenue and Cypress Street.
Oakland Engine Co. 4 was sent to the Cypress collapse and when it arrived, Firefighter
Victor M. Cuevas wrote, "Words can't describe the feeling that came over me as the
structure came closer in sight. It was very confusing. The engine stopped at about 2600
block of Cypress [at Peralta Street], where we were directed to the west side of the
structure."
A California Highway Patrol officer told the crew that a man was trapped alive in an
automobile on the lower deck. They grabbed all the tools from Engine Co. 4, then
commandeered a forklift to raise them to the lower deck. Firefighter Cuevas began to check
the seriousness of the injuries as Firefighter Andrew Papp began to pry and pull at the
wreckage.
Firefighter Cuevas continued, "During my patient assessment, I established his identity
which was Tim Peterson a Treasure Island Firefighter and son of an Oakland Fireman,
Dave Peterson."
As this rescue went on, this section of collapsed freeway began to shift and settle, and as
Firefighter Cuevas wrote, "CHP officer Tim Goodman informed us that the structure had
moved one-
Lumber and jacks were needed to support the tottering structure, and Firefighter Cuevas
yelled down to citzen-
A few minutes later, Fremont Truck Company Co. 1, the first unit dispatched by Chief
Lydon, arrived with the Hurst tool needed to finally pry the Treasure Island firefighter from
the wreckage. Firefighter Cuevas wrote, "We all gave a sigh of relief and hurried to get our
butts off the collapsing structure."
In the first seven hours of intensive search and rescue operations, 18 of 21 Oakland Fire
Department companies, assisted by 15 more mutual aid companies - and dozens of
ambulance and paramedic units - performed dozens of heroic rescues. More than 200
firefighters worked at the Cypress collapse during the first night of operations, and each of
these firefighters was given a critical incident stress debriefing after they were relieved of
duty at the scene.
What caused the collapse is still not thoroughly understood.
Dr. Mahin, in his testimony to the State Senate's Kopp Committee said, "At this stage, we
sent out teams after the earthquake and asked people what they saw, and there seems to be
some disagreement amongst the people. And so at this stage I don't have a feeling for it. I
suspect there was some domino effect where the cable restrainers did do their job, and as
the one section came down, it also contributed to pulling it down until you got to the
portions where we have a freeway onramp, and the more firm ground and the additional
columns on one end and the curved portion of the viaduct on the other side which tend to
be a little stiffer, and then at those locations the cable restrainers did fail and the remaining
portions of the structure did stand up."
The Cypress Freeway rescue efforts continued for several more days. To allow rescuers
to continue to safely punch through the rubble of the unstable wreck, the U.S. Geological
Survey installed a special alarm attached to a seismograph near the epicenter of the
earthquake. If an aftershock greater than Richter magnitude 4.5 occurred, a signal would
be transmitted to an alarm to rescuers. The alarm operated on the principal that the warning
signal travelled at the speed of light along the wire to the freeway, but the earthquake waves
travelled only at about the speed of sound. This would give rescuers at least 15 to 20
seconds advance warning to get off the tottering structure.
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