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As hundreds of quake-shaken Ventura County residents sought help and money Saturday at disaster relief centers in hard-hit Simi Valley and Fillmore, homeowners patched broken roofs against the expected rain. Temperatures for Ventura County are expected to be in the mids today and in the high 30s tonight, Seto said. Seismologists recorded a handful of aftershocks Saturday, but all registered a magnitude 3.
The Red Cross centers--offering food, clothing, medicine, tools and other aid to quake victims--will try to bridge any gaps left at the FEMA centers, which are run in the two cities by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, said Dennis Jennings, manager of the Simi Valley Red Cross center. The number of people in the four Red Cross emergency shelters had dwindled from to , said Mike Goth, Red Cross emergency services director for Ventura County.
Although water service was back on in both Simi Valley and Fillmore, Simi Valley officials issued a plea late Saturday for water conservation. Officials were still advising residents in Simi Valley and those living at Eldorado Mobile Home Estates in Fillmore to boil their water for drinking or cooking. By Saturday evening, building inspectors had nearly finished their rounds in Fillmore, having slapped red tags onto residential and commercial buildings to declare them unsafe.
Another buildings were labeled damaged and off-limits to unauthorized personnel or non-residents, Fillmore city building official Kevin McSweeney said. By Saturday morning in Simi Valley, inspectors had declared 60 residences and other buildings--including four churches and three schools--unsafe, and another buildings damaged, Deputy City Manager Jim Hansen said.
The Schrock brothers sweated away at the job. Elsewhere in Fillmore and Simi Valley, people moved out of condemned houses and kept appointments made earlier in the week with disaster aid centers in their cities.