Well, I've only taken one upper division geology class (paleoclimates) but the answer is no. Or rather, you should have the same level of concern as two wildfires along the same plate boundary.
One of the things you get used to in geology is that the ground under your feet is not all that solid, under the pressures we see. For instance, continents float up because their crust is lighter weight than ocean crust. Even the largest quakes only can trigger more out to 200km or so. But the recent California quake is in the Basin and Range province, not all that near the plate boundary. Sure I could feel it here on the Pacific Plate, but that's more like hearing a firework than being near the flare.
One of the things you get used to in geology is that the ground under your feet is not all that solid, under the pressures we see. For instance, continents float up because their crust is lighter weight than ocean crust. Even the largest quakes only can trigger more out to 200km or so. But the recent California quake is in the Basin and Range province, not all that near the plate boundary. Sure I could feel it here on the Pacific Plate, but that's more like hearing a firework than being near the flare.
"Kitto daijoubu da yo." - Sakura Kinomoto