Section 130000 Of Article 8. New State Responsibilities For Seismic Safety In Hospitals From California Health And Safety Code >> Division 107. >> Part 7. >> Chapter 1. >> Article 8.
130000
. (a) The Legislature hereby finds and declares the
following:
(1) The Alfred E. Alquist Hospital Facilities Seismic Safety Act
of 1983 was created because of the loss of life in the collapse of
hospitals during the Sylmar earthquake of 1971.
(2) We were reminded of the vulnerability of hospitals in the
Northridge earthquake of January 17, 1994.
(3) Several hospitals built prior to the act suffered major damage
and had to be evacuated.
(4) Hospitals built to the Alfred E. Alquist Hospital Facilities
Seismic Safety Act standards resisted the Northridge earthquakes with
very little structural damage demonstrating the value and necessity
of this act.
(5) Both pre- and post-act hospitals suffered damage to
architecture and to power and water systems that prevented hospitals
from being operational, caused the loss of one life, triggered
evacuations, unacceptable property losses, and added additional
concerns on emergency medical response.
(6) An earthquake survivability inventory of California's
hospitals completed by the Office of Statewide Health Planning and
Development in December 1989 indicated that over 83 percent of the
state's hospital beds were in buildings that did not comply with the
Alfred E. Alquist Hospital Facilities Seismic Safety Act because they
were issued permits prior to the effective date of the act.
Furthermore, 26 percent of the beds are in buildings posing
significant risks of collapse since they were built before modern
earthquake codes. The older hospitals pose significant threats of
collapse in major earthquakes and loss of functions in smaller or
more distant earthquakes.
(7) The 1989 survey also states: "Of the 490 hospitals surveyed,
nine hospitals are in Alquist-Priolo Earthquake Fault Rupture Zones,
31 are in areas subject to soil liquefaction, 14 in areas with
landslide potential, 33 in flood zones, and 29 have a possible loss
or disruption of access. Two hundred five hospitals had no emergency
fuel for their main boilers on hand, 19 had no emergency fuel for
their emergency generators. Onsite emergency potable water was
available at 273 hospitals and nonpotable water was available at 102
hospitals. Four hundred eighteen hospitals had emergency radios
onsite, and 419 hospitals had inadequate or partially adequate
equipment anchorage. In terms of available emergency preparedness,
inadequate or partially inadequate equipment anchorage is still the
most widespread shortcoming."
(8) This survey identifies many of the shortcomings that caused 23
hospitals to suspend some or all operations after the Northridge
earthquake. However, one hospital was rebuilt to comply with the
Alfred E. Alquist Hospital Facilities Seismic Safety Act after an
older hospital building had partially collapsed in the 1971 Sylmar
earthquake. The rebuilt hospital suffered failures in water
distribution systems and had to be evacuated.
(9) The state must rely on hospitals to support patients and offer
medical aid to earthquake victims.
(b) Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature, that:
(1) By enacting this article, the state shall take steps to ensure
that the expected earthquake performance of hospital buildings
housing inpatients and providing primary basic services is disclosed
to public agencies that have a need and a right to know, because the
medical industry cannot immediately bring all hospital buildings into
compliance with the Alfred E. Alquist Hospital Facilities Seismic
Safety Act.
(2) The state shall encourage structural retrofits or replacements
of hospital buildings housing inpatients and providing primary basic
services that place lives at risk because of their potential for
collapse during an earthquake.
(3) The state shall also encourage retrofits and enhancements to
critical hospital architecture, equipment, and utility and
communications systems to improve the ability of hospitals to remain
operational for those hospitals that do not pose risk to life.