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Outage Signals Growing Dependence on Satellites

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TIMES STAFF WRITERS

Expectant fathers still got the word. Doctors were off the golf course and on-call the old-fashioned way--by telephone. Parents lost their life-lines to their children. But Orange County’s police and hospitals reported no calamities.

To many Southern Californians, the blackout of the all-pervasive pager--which crept into our lives as a highly specialized emergency tool and somehow evolved, like car alarms and cellular phones, into the area’s unofficial bird call--was like being yanked off life support.

Others were relieved, even euphoric, that slashing the electronic leash granted them a reprieve from the psychological claustrophobia that walls in a growing number of people who are always on call. Their sudden freedom came Tuesday afternoon, when a communications satellite spun out of control and up to 90% of America’s estimated 49.5 million pagers went silent.

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But most people emerged unscathed from the pager panic.

At St. Joseph Hospital in Orange, all women in labor were able to reach their husbands or birth coaches with no problem, and 16 babies were born overnight, said spokeswoman Cathy Semar.

Even the social lives of teenagers--probably the highest pager-per-capita population--managed to survive.

“I paged and paged my boyfriend, and he was not getting the pages,” said an Orange Coast College student steering her pick-up truck through the drive-thru at a Costa Mesa Taco Bell. She thought he was ignoring her.

On Wednesday morning, Los Angeles Mayor Richard Riordan tried to page his press secretary, Noelia Rodriguez, to discuss an annoying news article. She was 20 feet from her office, enjoying a rare work meeting uninterrupted by the high-pitched bleating that mars the soundtrack of her professional life.

“It was nice. The last time I had this much peace and quiet was four years ago, when the Southern California phone system went dead,” Rodriguez said. “When it was announced on the radio, I said, ‘Yes! That’s so cool!’ I’m sure those satellites will be back in working order sooner than many people would like.”

For Eileen Quimpo, it was an unparalleled disaster. Quimpo, the office administrator for six Los Angeles emergency room doctors, needs to deliver patient files and information in minutes.

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“Right now, while I’m on the phone, I don’t know if a doctor is looking for me,” Quimpo said. “This is our main means of communication.”

For her techno-dependency, it was cold turkey. Quimpo’s pager is linked to e-mail and a news and sports headline service. “It makes me nervous,” Quimpo said. “I feel like I’ve lost touch with the outside world.”

Doctors stood by their phones or stayed put.

Dr. Peter Grossman parked himself all day at the Grossman Burn Center in Sherman Oaks--instead of going to his office or somewhere else--in case a patient needed him.

At UC Irvine Medical Center in Orange, people on waiting lists for kidney or liver transplants were reassured they would be found should organs become available, said Janet Mize, the center’s senior coordinator for transplants.

“We were doing transplants long before there were beepers,” Mize said.

In an announcement over the public address system Tuesday afternoon, when the satellite outage occurred, doctors were told to make sure they were reachable by phone, cell phone, fax or e-mail. No additional physicians had to be called in, but several senior residents from the ER stayed the night after their shifts ended, said Kim Pine, spokeswoman for UC Irvine.

“Although this has been a minor inconvenience, it hasn’t really affected us much,” Pine said. “By now everyone knows there is a problem, and they’re taking it upon themselves to make sure we know where they are so we can reach them.”

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At Los Angeles’ Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, 2,200 doctors use a land-based paging system that was unaffected, but staff spent Tuesday evening alerting employees by phone, said Charlie Lahai, the media manager of the facility, who is leaving her job next month to spend more time with her kids. She has no regrets about handing in her hospital pager, though she will still rely on the “mommy pager” that her kids’ baby-sitters and teachers use for emergencies.

“Being on call 24 hours a day is tough,” Lahai said. “I don’t mind working 50 hours a week, but when I go home, I want to be home.”

Many people, said New York pop marketing analyst Faith Popcorn, “are actually going to love the little respite that this little satellite problem produced. It’s like for a minute we can go back to the time when pagers weren’t part of our lives,” she said.

Some can never go back to that time. Not for a nanosecond.

For Andrea Tzadik, an in-demand real estate agent in the feverish Westside L.A. market, pagers are not just an accessory. .

Late Tuesday, a client wanted Tzadik to write an offer: “They were paging me like crazy, and I was out showing.”

A high-level client is coming from out of town, and the relocation scout couldn’t find Tzadik: “She was out of her mind.”

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On Wednesday morning, a buyer, unable to make a showing, was forced to send a friend: “It’s crazy!”

There’s more. Her two children have pagers: “With teenagers it’s almost imperative. You want to know where they are.”

Take away her pager, and “I’d be back in the Middle Ages. I can’t live without it,” Tzadik said.

A lot of young Californians know the feeling. Pagers--they come in Day-Glo colors--are a fixture of youth culture, along with a complex language of situationally appropriate numeric messages that would rival any police radio codes.

Pagers have become an essential accessory for many students who, without them, feel socially crippled. Some students wear two: one for parents to call and one for friends.

“I thought I lost mine last weekend. I went for two days without it and just felt like I was naked,” joked Rob Steinhilber, 18, a Costa Mesa High School senior.

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In Los Angeles County, Mike Taschyan, 21, said he got 50 pages a day until Tuesday. “Then nothing,” he said, disconsolately, in an interview in a Van Nuys fast food joint.

He was still wearing his tiny opaque pager on the slouching waistband of his pajama bottoms, hoping it would come to life again. It was almost as difficult for him to remove as the lacy spider web tattoo covering his left arm.

“I’ve got a lot of friends, and this is the only way they can get ahold of me,” he said. Mike’s friends were worried.

“He always calls me back in less than five minutes,” said Alex Campuzo. “I was scared something bad happened to him.”

Stephen Rattien, head of a division at Rand Corp., a think tank that does work for the White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy, said that only a tiny fraction of subscribers use pagers for critical events.

“At the other end of the curve are people whose use is somewhat frivolous and marginal, and the downside of their use may actually exceed the benefits,” he said.

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“Husbands and wives, and most starkly kids, use pagers as a sort of extension of family life, and it’s not entirely clear this is a desirable surrogate for close interaction,” he said. “I suspect more classwork and homework got done as a result of the failure of the satellite system.”

Rattien suspected that less was accomplished in America’s multibillion-dollar drug trade.

“That’s a prime example of an industry highly dependent on the use of pagers for bringing buyers and sellers together,” he said.

Drug Enforcement Administration spokeswoman Sharon Carter said: “If it did interfere with business, that’s fine by us.”

But in the rarefied world of I-love-you-babe-let’s-do-lunch this little crisis may come in handy.

“This is going to become the No. 1 excuse for people not getting back to each other,” English said. “ ‘Oh, that was when my pager was out.’ For the next month, that’s going to surpass ‘The check is in the mail.’ ”

Times staff writers Megan Garvey and H.G. Reza contributed to this story.

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