{"action_steps":["Find out whether your home or route is in a high or very high landslide susceptibility area.","Avoid adding weight, excess runoff, or unnecessary hard surfaces on unstable slopes.","Stabilize slopes where needed and keep vegetation that helps hold soil in place.","Subscribe to warning systems and make an evacuation plan if you live near a slope.","Retrofit or protect at-risk structures when slope instability is identified."],"at_risk_groups":["People living on or below unstable slopes.","Residents in Eastlake/Fruitvale high-susceptibility areas.","Residents in East Oakland Hills and North Oakland Hills very high susceptibility areas.","Not specified beyond people and facilities in mapped high and very high landslide susceptibility areas."],"base_priority_score":6,"historical_examples":["April 6, 2017 Aitken Drive collapse, with six homes evacuated and water and power impacts.","2022-2023 atmospheric river landslides and mudslides.","2024 heavy rainfall that triggered road erosion and blockages."],"key_stats":["Official Priority Risk Index (PRI): 2.6, ranked Medium.","The LHMP says at least one landslide, whether small or large, is expected annually in the city.","Population exposed: 105,649 people in high susceptibility areas and 12,314 people in very high susceptibility areas.","Buildings exposed: 27,998 in high susceptibility areas and 4,083 in very high susceptibility areas.","Community lifelines exposed: 233.","Exposed value: $25,180,414,966 in high susceptibility areas and $3,114,145,788 in very high susceptibility areas."],"locations":["Eastlake/Fruitvale.","North Oakland/Adams Point.","Glenview/Redwood Heights.","East Oakland Hills.","North Oakland Hills."],"name":"Landslide","personalization_notes":[],"personalized_what_this_means_for_you":"If your home, street, or route to safety is near a steep or unstable slope, strong storms can become a direct property and access problem. This is especially important in hillside areas.","priority_reason":"Landslide is ranked medium and the LHMP expects at least one landslide somewhere in the city each year. It scores in the middle because exposure is significant but impacts are more localized than earthquake, wildfire, or severe weather.","priority_score":6,"real_world_impact":"For residents near steep slopes, landslides can mean sudden road closures, unstable ground, utility problems, and in some cases evacuation.","risk_level":"Medium","slug":"landslide","summary":"Landslides happen when soil, rock, or debris moves downhill. In Oakland, heavy rain, unstable slopes, wildfire, and earthquakes can all raise this risk.","top_risks":["Slope failure that damages or threatens homes and buildings.","Road blockages that slow evacuation, response, and daily travel.","Damage to utilities and other lifelines on unstable slopes.","Sediment runoff and habitat damage after slope failure.","More landslides after heavy rain, earthquakes, or wildfire."],"what_could_realistically_happen":"A wet winter storm could trigger slope movement that cracks pavement, damages retaining areas, closes roads, and forces a small number of homes to evacuate or shelter elsewhere.","what_this_means_for_you":"If your home, street, or route to safety is near a steep or unstable slope, strong storms can become a direct property and access problem. This is especially important in hillside areas.","why_this_is_a_real_threat_in_oakland":"The LHMP identifies large high-susceptibility areas and repeated local events. It also notes that landslides often show up as secondary hazards after flooding, earthquakes, or wildfire."}
