LASD Altadena Station's CERT Team

LASD Altadena Station's CERT Team The Altadena CERT page strives to show how the team and LASD and LA County Fire prepare for everyday emergencies.

Altadena CERT is organized by the Los Angeles Sheriff Department and is a proud partner of Citizen Corps in the effort to have everyone in America prepare, train, and volunteer. However, during a disaster, the number and scope of incidents can overwhelm conventional emergency services. CERT is a positive and realistic approach to emergency and disaster situations where citizens may initially be on

their own and their actions can make a difference. While people will respond to others in need without the training, one goal of the CERT program is to help them do so effectively and efficiently without placing themselves in unnecessary danger. In the CERT training, citizens learn to:

manage utilities and put out small fires,
treat the three medical killers by opening airways, controlling bleeding, and treating for shock,
provide basic medical aid,
search for and rescue victims safely,
organize themselves and spontaneous volunteers to be effective,
and collect disaster intelligence to support first responder efforts.

Welcome back Crescenta Valley CERT program!
05/11/2026

Welcome back Crescenta Valley CERT program!

More CERT training coming up in April!  Note Wednesday dates starting April 8 through May 27, 2026
04/02/2026

More CERT training coming up in April! Note Wednesday dates starting April 8 through May 27, 2026

Large CERT Training Class!  Just graduated from classes taken at Altadena Community Center given by LACoF Department Mar...
03/30/2026

Large CERT Training Class! Just graduated from classes taken at Altadena Community Center given by LACoF Department Maria Grycan.

Thank you Mala Arthur
02/14/2026

Thank you Mala Arthur

This Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026,  CERT meeting at Altadena Community Center 4p-6p; Community Emergency Response TeamWe will...
02/01/2026

This Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026, CERT meeting at Altadena Community Center 4p-6p; Community Emergency Response Team
We will talk about earthquake readiness, the fire, fire recovery, and …
CERT TRAINING, NOW SET FOR SATURDAY MARCH 14, 21, AND 28, 2026 AT THE ALTADENA COMMUNITY CENTER from 9am to 5pm. See attached flyer.
Please spread the word!

Altadena, please attend Wednesday Jan. 7, 2026 at Grocery Outlet Parking Lot 1st Anniversary Commemoration of the Eaton ...
01/03/2026

Altadena, please attend Wednesday Jan. 7, 2026 at Grocery Outlet Parking Lot 1st Anniversary Commemoration of the Eaton Fire at 5pm. Partially sponsored by Altadena Rotary

12/20/2025

Her name was Tilly Smith. And she was about to prove that a single school lesson could mean the difference between life and death.
On the morning of December 26, 2004, Tilly was walking along Mai Khao Beach in Phuket, Thailand, with her family. They were on their first overseas holiday together—a Christmas treat.
The beach was beautiful. The weather was perfect. But something was wrong.
Tilly noticed the water wasn't behaving normally.
"It wasn't calm and it wasn't going in and then out," she later recalled. "It was just coming in and in and in."
The sea had turned frothy—"like you get on a beer," she said. "It was sort of sizzling."
Any other 10-year-old might have thought it was strange. Tilly knew exactly what it meant.
Just two weeks earlier, in her geography class at Danes Hill School in Surrey, her teacher Andrew Kearney had shown the class black-and-white footage of the 1946 tsunami that devastated Hawaii. He taught them the warning signs: the sea receding unusually far, frothy bubbling water, the ocean behaving in ways it shouldn't.
Tilly was watching those exact warning signs unfold in front of her.
She started screaming at her parents. "There's going to be a tsunami!"
They didn't believe her. They couldn't see any wave. The sky was clear. The beach was calm.
But Tilly wouldn't stop. She became more insistent, more frantic.
"I'm going," she finally said. "I'm definitely going. There is definitely going to be a tsunami."
Her father Colin heard the urgency in her voice. He decided to trust his daughter.
By coincidence, an English-speaking Japanese man nearby overheard Tilly use the word "tsunami." He'd just heard news of an earthquake in Sumatra. "I think your daughter's right," he said.
Colin alerted the hotel staff. They began evacuating the beach immediately.
Tilly's mother Penny was one of the last to leave. She had to sprint as the water began rushing in behind her.
"I ran," Penny recalled, "and then I thought I was going to die."
They made it to the second floor of the hotel with seconds to spare.
Then the wave hit.
It was 30 feet tall.
Everything on the beach—beds, palm trees, debris—was swept into the swimming pool and beyond. "Even if you hadn't drowned," Penny later said, "you would have been hit by something."
The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami killed over 230,000 people across 14 countries. Entire beaches in Phuket were wiped out. Thousands died.
But at Mai Khao Beach, not a single person was killed.
Because a 10-year-old girl paid attention in geography class.
Tilly was hailed as the "Angel of the Beach." She received the Thomas Gray Special Award from the Marine Society. She was named "Child of the Year" by a French magazine. She appeared at the United Nations and met Bill Clinton.
Her story is now taught in schools around the world as an example of why disaster education matters.
Her father Colin still thinks about what could have happened.
"If she hadn't told us, we would have just kept on walking," he said. "I'm convinced we would have died."
Tilly is now 30 years old. She lives in London and works in yacht chartering.
She still credits her geography teacher, Andrew Kearney.
"If it wasn't for Mr. Kearney," she told the United Nations, "I'd probably be dead and so would my family."
Two weeks. One lesson. One hundred lives.
That's the power of education.
Follow David Attenborough Fans for more.

WE ARE RESUMING OUR ALTADENA LASD STATION CERT MEETINGS WEDNESDAY NOV. 5, 2025 AT THE ALTADENA COMMUNITY CENTER 4PM TO 6...
11/05/2025

WE ARE RESUMING OUR ALTADENA LASD STATION CERT MEETINGS WEDNESDAY NOV. 5, 2025 AT THE ALTADENA COMMUNITY CENTER 4PM TO 6PM

Altadena LASD Captain Ethan Marquez and Deputy Balyan have asked our Community Emergency Response Team to start meeting again.

We will meet this coming Wednesday November 5, 2025, at the Altadena Community Center (ACC), 730 E Altadena Dr, Altadena, CA 91001, between 4pm and 6pm. The ACC has reopened with limited staffing, so that’s the best time we could get.

I lost a bunch of my CERT emails in the fire, so if you know someone on our team, please contact them and ask them to come to our meeting. Also, send me that contact with their email and phone number.

We also lost all our CERT gear, stored in a storage closet in my home, which burned down.

Jon and I are fine. We sold our lot and are looking for another home in Altadena.

Given the state of our town, the LASD intends to deploy us on more occasions. We all need to bind together and Rebuild Altadena

See you there!

Deb Halberstadt
ALD CERT Laison

08/06/2025

Decoding the confusing—and often misleading—data surrounding the Eaton Fire. Decoding the confusing—and often misleading—data surrounding the Eaton Fire.

Address

730 E Altadena Drive
Altadena, CA
91001

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