Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Podcast: What Happens to Housing Costs After the Big Quake Hits?
gvw_calmatters
By CalMatters
Published 6 years ago on
July 19, 2019

Share

California was lucky. Again.


Opinion
Matt Levin
CALmatters

The major earthquakes that rattled the Mojave Desert town of Ridgecrest earlier this month — a magnitude 6.4 temblor on July 4th followed a few days later by a whopping 7.1 quake felt throughout Southern California — were far from major population centers. Damage to people and property was relatively minimal. Even Ridgecrest itself, with most if its single-family housing constructed under updated building codes, surprised earthquake engineers by emerging from the twin quakes with scrapes and bruises but no serious devastation.
For the past quarter-century, dozens of earthquakes in more remote parts of the state have stirred the low-level anxiety that Californians closer to the coast have lived with since the 1989 Loma Prieta quake collapsed a segment of the Bay Bridge, and the 1994 Northridge quake crumbled key Los Angeles-area freeways. Residents near the San Andreas or Hayward or Puente Hills fault lines follow a familiar routine after these more-distant temblors: Call loved ones feeling the aftershocks, make a mental note to re-stock the earthquake kit with bottled water, and spend the next few days hoping they’ll be on vacation when “the big one” finally happens.
But for a state in the midst of a housing affordability crisis that experts say is primarily due to a shortage of available homes and apartments, the Ridgecrest quakes provoke another unsettling thought — one that was less pressing decades ago when places like Los Angeles and San Francisco were far cheaper to live in. When the inevitable happens and a big quake hits a major city, what will happen to housing costs?

Familiar Figure in California Housing Circles

The wildfires that have devastated smaller California cities in recent years provide a window into what could happen. Since last November’s Camp Fire ravaged the small Central Valley town of Paradise, the neighboring city of Chico has struggled to find available housing for evacuees. Demand for rental housing has skyrocketed and home prices have soared.

“The wildfires have really given us something to go by in really understanding what the impact on communities can be after disasters.” Maiclaire Bolton Smith, seismologist for the real estate data firm CoreLogic
“The wildfires have really given us something to go by in really understanding what the impact on communities can be after disasters,” Maiclaire Bolton Smith, seismologist for the real estate data firm CoreLogic, said on “Gimme Shelter: The California Housing Crisis Podcast.”
“The need for rental properties may increase because of just supply and demand, given the fact that there will be a lot of people needing places to live” and diminished supply, she said.
But the possible scale of damage from a major earthquake — and the displaced Californians who would need of temporary and/or permanent housing—is far larger than what even the most devastating wildfires have wrought.
The United States Geological Survey forecasts that a magnitude 7.0 earthquake on the Hayward Fault, which runs through Oakland, could temporarily displace up to 400,000 people in the East Bay and Silicon Valley.
A CoreLogic simulation of a major San Andreas quake – one big enough to strike both Northern and Southern California simultaneously — estimates as many as 3.5 million single-family homes could be damaged.
That’s a familiar figure in California housing circles: It’s the exact same number Gov. Gavin Newsom has said he wants to build by 2025 to ease the state’s housing shortage.
On this episode of “Gimme Shelter,” CalMatters’ Matt Levin and the Los Angeles Times’ Liam Dillon discuss how “the big one” could exacerbate California’s housing crisis.

CalMatters.org
 is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Wing of Plane Carrying 6 Members of Congress Is Clipped at Reagan Airport

DON'T MISS

Trump Repeals Biden-Era Limit on Water Flow in Shower Heads

DON'T MISS

Helicopter Has Crashed in the Hudson River off Manhattan, Authorities Say

DON'T MISS

Social Security Rolls Back Restrictions on Filing for Benefits by Phone

DON'T MISS

Trump and Netanyahu Steer Toward an Ugly World, Together

DON'T MISS

Visalia Driver Crashes Into Utility Pole, Causing Major Delays on Goshen Avenue

DON'T MISS

Sidelined and Still Processing Her Defeat, Harris Looks for a Way Back In

DON'T MISS

Trump’s ‘Buy’ Tip on Social Media Before His Tariffs Pause Made Money for Investors Who Listened

DON'T MISS

California Woman Arrested in Russia Freed in Prisoner Swap: What We Know

DON'T MISS

Trump Has Added 145% Tariff to China, White House Clarifies

UP NEXT

New Plan to Accelerate CA High-Speed Rail Construction Deserves Attention, Support

UP NEXT

Why Did So Many People Delude Themselves About Trump?

UP NEXT

LA Feud Is Prime Example of Constant Clashes Between CA Cities and Counties

UP NEXT

Earth Day Festival at Fresno City College Is a Great Place to Eat, Play, Learn

UP NEXT

Can Musk Pull Trump Back From the Tariff Ledge?

UP NEXT

CA’s Homeless Shelters Aren’t for Everyone. That Doesn’t Mean They Don’t Work

UP NEXT

In California’s Capitol, Some Political Fights Span Decades

UP NEXT

I Just Saw the Future. It Was Not in America.

UP NEXT

Trump Just Bet the Farm

UP NEXT

As Dem Candidates for Governor Increase, They Wait for Harris to Decide

Social Security Rolls Back Restrictions on Filing for Benefits by Phone

22 minutes ago

Trump and Netanyahu Steer Toward an Ugly World, Together

30 minutes ago

Visalia Driver Crashes Into Utility Pole, Causing Major Delays on Goshen Avenue

31 minutes ago

Sidelined and Still Processing Her Defeat, Harris Looks for a Way Back In

49 minutes ago

Trump’s ‘Buy’ Tip on Social Media Before His Tariffs Pause Made Money for Investors Who Listened

54 minutes ago

California Woman Arrested in Russia Freed in Prisoner Swap: What We Know

2 hours ago

Trump Has Added 145% Tariff to China, White House Clarifies

3 hours ago

The House Passed a Requirement to Prove US Citizenship to Vote. This Is How It Could Affect Voting

3 hours ago

Israel Releases 10 Palestinians Detained From Gaza. They Say They Suffered Abuse

3 hours ago

Merced Revises Flag Policy After Debate. ‘I Just Don’t See That as the Role of Government’

4 hours ago

Wing of Plane Carrying 6 Members of Congress Is Clipped at Reagan Airport

Two American Airlines jets, including one carrying at least six members of Congress from New York and New Jersey, clipped wings on a taxiway...

18 seconds ago

18 seconds ago

Wing of Plane Carrying 6 Members of Congress Is Clipped at Reagan Airport

18 minutes ago

Trump Repeals Biden-Era Limit on Water Flow in Shower Heads

A helicopter crashed into the Hudson River near Manhattan on Thursday afternoon, prompting a rescue response from fire department crews and multiple boats. (Shutterstock)
20 minutes ago

Helicopter Has Crashed in the Hudson River off Manhattan, Authorities Say

22 minutes ago

Social Security Rolls Back Restrictions on Filing for Benefits by Phone

30 minutes ago

Trump and Netanyahu Steer Toward an Ugly World, Together

A driver crashed into a utility pole Thursday, April 10, 2025, on Goshen Avenue in Visalia, causing major traffic delays but no reported injuries. (Visalia FD)
31 minutes ago

Visalia Driver Crashes Into Utility Pole, Causing Major Delays on Goshen Avenue

Former Vice President Kamala Harris, right, listens with her husband, Doug Emhoff, center, and former President Joe Biden as President Donald Trump is inaugurated inside the Capitol Rotunda in Washington, Jan. 20, 2025. A successful campaign for governor of California in 2026, Harris has told allies, would give her a prominent perch from which to push back against President Trump and defend Democratic priorities. (Kenny Holston/The New York Times)
49 minutes ago

Sidelined and Still Processing Her Defeat, Harris Looks for a Way Back In

President Donald Trump is displayed on a television on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York, Wednesday, April 9, 2025. (AP/Seth Wenig)
54 minutes ago

Trump’s ‘Buy’ Tip on Social Media Before His Tariffs Pause Made Money for Investors Who Listened

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend