At the UC/Riverside Tomas Rivera Library, 20,000 volumes were dumped from shelves, and 1200 damaged. They were not covered by insurance. At California State University/San Bernardino, 50,000 volumes went down. Although the shelving was seismically braced, it still swayed and leaned. All the professional staff was away when this happened. At the Yucca Valley branch of the San Bernardino County Library, the shelving was also braced with bolts to the floor, but they sheared off in the 6.5 and 7.4 quakes; air conditioning ducts fell, map cases and card catalogs overturned, and light fixtures and ceiling tiles fell. At the Joshua Tree Branch Library, there was structural damage and anchored shelves were torn loose, dumping 12,000 volumes.
IELDRIN reported that the only disaster supplies anyone requested were more hard hats. The fires and floods that often accompany earthquakes did not occur for these libraries.
With the aid of an NEH Emergency Grant, the Northeast Document Conservation Center (NEDCC) provided telephone assistance and technical leaflets on salvage of rain-soaked collections, and sent a team of three conservators to Miami. There they took part, together with a paintings conservator and an objects conservator from Miami, in a workshop on disaster recovery, and a free clinic to which institutions and members of the public could bring damaged objects from their collections for examination and advice. University Products supplied free storage and packing materials; the Historical Museum of Southern Florida served as the host and helped publicize the programs.
NEDCC conservators also made onsite visits to institutions with damaged paper-based collections, and plans follow-up activities.
OCLC and its regional networks (including AMIGOS ant SOLINET) offered disaster assistance to libraries damaged by Hurricane Andrew. This included replacing damaged catalog cards and helping rebuild databases as well as providing a full range of recovery services through SOLINET and AMIGOS.