PHOTOS: One year after South Napa Earthquake

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Saturday, August 22, 2015
This photo taken on Wednesday, August 12, 2015 in Napa, Calif. shows that there's still plenty of foundation work to complete beneath homes in the area one year after the quake.
On August 11, 2015, Mike Gibson of the First Presbyterian Church in Napa, Calif. shows us the historic 800 pound brass bell where it fell in the tower after the Napa Quake.
One of the original stained glass windows in the First Presbyterian Church in Napa, Calif. is seen on Tuesday, August 11, 2015.
Founders of the First Presbyterian Church in Napa, Calif. are seen in a photograph placed on the pulpit with the quake-damaged church in the background on August 11, 2015.
Napa's First Presbyterian Church, that's on the National Register of Historic Places, is seen in Napa, Calif. on Tuesday, August 11, 2015.
Wall built by developers that crumbled during the quake in Napa, Calif. is still in shambles a year later on August 21, 2015. Residents want money from the city and Caltrans help.
Wall built by developers that crumbled during the quake in Napa, Calif. is still in shambles a year later on August 21, 2015. Residents want money from the city and Caltrans help.
Wall built by developers that crumbled during the quake in Napa, Calif. is still in shambles a year later on August 21, 2015. Residents want money from the city and Caltrans help.
On Tuesday, August 11, 2015 in her Napa, Calif. store called The Roost, owner Patricia Trimble shows us where $11,000-worth of craft paint fell on the floor during the quake.
On August 11, 2015, Patricia Trimble holds a postcard that helped pay for a quake-damaged window in her Napa, Calif. store. She took a photo, made the card, and sold them for $1.
On August 11, 2015, Patricia Trimble holds a postcard that helped pay for a quake-damaged window in her Napa, Calif. store. She took a photo, made the card, and sold them for $1.
Chain-link fencing is seen in Napa Calif. on August 11, 2015. The city still has a lot, but not nearly as much as before when the earthquake struck.
The old county courthouse, a long-term restoration project, is seen in Napa, Calif. on August 11, 2015.
Tear 'em down. Put 'em up. Construction on historic buildings is seen in Napa, Calif. on August 11, 2015.
The gents at Dunne Right Construction have had a busy year. They posed for me just before knocking off for the day in Napa, Calif. on August 11, 2015.
First Presbyterian Church, seen in Napa Calif. on August, 11, 2015, missed one year of services and the work goes after the quake. But they never missed a day of feeding the needy.
First Presbyterian Church, seen in Napa Calif. on August, 11, 2015, missed one year of services and the work goes after the quake. But they never missed a day of feeding the needy.
Some of the original stained glass of the First Presbyterian Church in Napa, Calif. is seen on Tuesday, August 11, 2015.
Garret Murphy of the Vintner's Collective in the historic Pfeiffer Building is seen in Napa, Calif. on August 12, 2015. He's still in business after a tough year.
A sign for a furniture store that's empty is seen on Main Street in Napa, Calif.  on Tuesday, August 11, 2015.
"What if there is another quake?" I asked Elizabeth Emmett in Napa, Calif. on August 12, 2015. She said, "Then that new foundation better stand up. That's all I can say."
Elizabeth Emmett stands in her pool filled with cracks in Napa, Calif. on August 11, 2015.  A new fault line runs directly beneath that pool and her home.
The side of Elizabeth Emmett's house in Napa, Calif. is seen on August 12, 2015. Work has delayed retirement, even after low-interest federal loans.
In Browns Valley in Napa, Calif., the quake tossed everything Michelle Kidwell owned onto the floor. This religious symbol stayed on the wall. It is still there on August 12, 2015
In Napa, Calif. on August 12, 2015, I asked contractor Brian Jones how long until he needs to look for work. "About five years," he said. This is a face you can trust.
This house, seen in Napa, Calif. on August 12, 2015, slipped three feet off its foundation during the quake. Old-growth Douglas Fir and solid construction made it salvageable.
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PHOTOS: One year after South Napa EarthquakeThis photo taken on Wednesday, August 12, 2015 in Napa, Calif. shows that there's still plenty of foundation work to complete beneath homes in the area one year after the quake.
KGO-TV/Wayne Freedman

NAPA, Calif. (KGO) -- It's been one year since a magnitude-6.0 quake shook Napa and the region to its core. A look around the city shows there's still plenty of damage.

Click here for details on the one-year anniversary, and Click here for full coverage on the South Napa Earthquake.

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