Chattanooga Times Free Press

Emotional residents return to California mudslide area

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MONTECITO, Calif. — Taking stock of their lives and rememberin­g those who were lost, emotional residents on Thursday trickled back to the California coastal town that was devastated two weeks ago by mudslides that killed at least 21 people and destroyed more than a hundred homes.

Santa Barbara County officials finally lifted evacuation orders this week for about 1,600 people in the hillside enclave of Montecito, while thousands of others still waited for word it was safe to return.

Sheriff’s deputies drove vans full of evacuees back to their homes. The owners of those that were heavily damaged or destroyed were allowed to briefly search the rubble for precious belongings.

Curtis Skene fought back tears as firefighte­rs uncovered old photograph­s of his father in the ruins of his home.

“You have to be grateful you’re OK,” Skene said. “It’s just stuff.”

Eric and Pamela Arneson found their home still standing. While he dug through their refrigerat­or, throwing away spoiled food and chuckling at how bad it smelled, she took notes on each item to submit to their insurance company.

The couple initially remained in their home after the mudslides but later stayed with friends and in a hotel when their electricit­y was shut off a few days later.

“We can’t feel sorry for ourselves. Our lives are OK. Our house is OK,” Eric Arneson said.

The couple bought their home in 1972 and had attended church with John McManigal, who died in the mudslides.

“He was the rock of our church,” Pamela Arneson said.

Authoritie­s warned that the returns would be gradual and many people would have to stay out until at least the end of the month.

The town’s narrow streets were clogged with bulldozers and utility trucks as crews remove mud and boulders and rebuild drainage pipes and power lines. Utility workers also are busy restoring water and sewage pipes, gas service and electricit­y.

Montecito was hit by debris-laden flash floods on Jan. 9 when downpours from a storm hit mountain slopes burned bare by a huge wildfire. Hundreds of homes were damaged. A 17-year-old boy and 2-yearold girl remain missing.

The majority of residents and businesses in and around the town of about 9,000 people have yet to receive an all-clear advisory.

On Thursday, attorneys announced a class-action lawsuit they have filed on behalf of a group of Montecito residents and business owners. They are suing the utility Southern California Edison, saying it had a role in starting the fire that led to the subsequent displaceme­nt and devastatio­n. It comes after a similar lawsuit filed last week that names Edison and a Montecito local utility.

Officials have not given a cause of the fire, and Edison said it’s premature to speculate on the litigation before the investigat­ion is completed.

Village Service Station reopened shortly after the mudslides, providing fuel, food and restrooms for emergency responders.

Owner Keith Slocum said Thursday that “it looked like a Third World country” in the days after the disaster but since then crews have made significan­t progress clearing roads. He’s eager to learn when neighborin­g businesses will be allowed to reopen.

“We really could use something definitive,” he said. “I don’t know what the benchmarks are for why they open some parts and don’t open others.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pamela Arneson writes down the food that was lost as Eric Arneson, 72, cleans out the refrigerat­or Thursday after returning to their home for the first time in almost two weeks in Montecito, Calif.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pamela Arneson writes down the food that was lost as Eric Arneson, 72, cleans out the refrigerat­or Thursday after returning to their home for the first time in almost two weeks in Montecito, Calif.

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