Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Storm swells California river

Helicopter rescue crew saves 2 people, dog

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LOS ANGELES — Two people and a dog were rescued from a rain-swollen Southern California river Monday as a late-season storm moved slowly through the state, bringing heavy showers and snow.

A helicopter rescue crew pulled the dog’s owner, a woman, from the rushing Los Angeles River, in the San Fernando Valley, around 2:40 p.m. But the dog slipped away and continued for more than an hour down the river, which runs for several miles through an inaccessib­le channel with high concrete walls.

At one point a good Samaritan jumped into the raging water and grabbed the dog, but the animal slipped from his grip too and the man had to be rescued himself.

The medium-to-large black and brown dog eventually reached shallower water, where it was able to walk, and a Los Angeles Fire Department crew on the ground pulled it to safety around 4 p.m. to the cheers of bystanders.

“The bystander who went in the water earlier and required rescue was transporte­d to the hospital with dog bite wounds,” the fire department said in a statement. The dog’s owner didn’t require hospitaliz­ation, the statement said.

More than an inch of rain fell in parts of Southern California, the National Weather Service said.

The weather system marked a turnabout from an extremely dry winter that has spurred calls for water conservati­on.

The storm hit the San Francisco Bay region overnight and spread east and south. Santa Rosa, north of San Francisco, recorded just under an inch of rain by Monday afternoon, the weather service said.

Winter weather advisories were issued for the Sierra Nevada, where six inches to 12 inches of snow were expected to fall at elevations above 6,000 feet, the National Weather Service said.

The Mammoth Mountain resort said the storm could bring some of the biggest totals in quite a while.

“Mother Nature has returned wintry weather and we couldn’t be more stoked,” the resort said on its website.

Winter storm warnings posted for Southern California mountain ranges called for similar amounts of snowfall as well as up to 18 inches at higher elevations. Bear Mountain and Snow Summit east of Los Angeles announced last week that they will remain open through April 16.

Evacuation orders were briefly in effect for some canyon neighborho­ods near wildfire burn scars in Orange County over fears that hillsides could loosen and create debris flows. Streets were flooded but no major damage was reported.

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