Lodi News-Sentinel

Experts say California is entering the ‘fire-flood’ era

- By Tony Bizjak

SACRAMENTO — Brent Larson awoke at 4 a.m. to the shake and rumble of what felt like a freight train rolling down the hill toward his Santa Barbara County home.

He leaped from his bed and woke his two sons. In seconds, a wall of water, mud and rock slammed into his house, smashing through one window, then the next, then a third, pouring in as the trio sprinted to the safety of the chimney at the home’s far corner.

“It was like out of ‘Indiana Jones,’” he said, nine months later, still shaken.

He was lucky. Twenty-one of his Montecito neighbors were killed that Jan. 9 night, and 400 homes damaged or destroyed. Two other people are missing, believed to be entombed somewhere in the now hardened mud that still covers parts of Montecito, an upscale village next to Santa Barbara.

Worse, that night was not a freak incident, state emergency officials say.

California is entering what experts call the “fire-flood” era: a formidable one-two punch prompted by warmer temperatur­es, bigger wildland fires, and more intense winter rain dumps, even in drought years.

Fall fire season sets the table by denuding millions of acres of hillsides and baking the soil surface so that it becomes nonabsorbe­nt, or, in scientific terms, hydrophobi­c. When heavy winter rains hit, the water cannot penetrate the burned soil, and instead rolls downhill in the form of a mud and ash soup, similar to a flash flood, carrying boulders and trees with it.

“We know where things are headed,” climate scientist Daniel Swain of UCLA said. “We are just entering this era, and it is only going to get more interestin­g from here.”

As witnessed in Montecito, debris flows can run for miles, burying highways, ripping up gas lines, destroying homes and taking human life. A quartermil­e of Highway 101 was buried in 12 feet of mud soup that morning. Battered cars and trucks ended up dumped on the beach below town.

California’s wildland fires were massive and destructiv­e again this summer. Members of the Watershed Emergency Response Team from the state Department of Forestry and Fire Protection have been busy scouring fire-scarred hillsides across the state in recent weeks and identified areas ripe for fire-flood debris flows should heavy rains hit.

That includes areas on the western edge of Redding and around remote Whiskeytow­n where the Carr Fire burned in July and August, as well as charred mountain slopes above Interstate 5 north of Redding.

Debris flow conditions can last several years after a fire. Montecito and other Santa Barbara County communitie­s remain at risk, as do areas around Santa Rosa and Napa, where destructiv­e fires hit in 2017.

A debris flow earlier this month during a cloudburst at the Ferguson Fire site near Yosemite forced closure of Highway 140, blocking people from getting in and out of the national park.

In Southern California, where more people live in steep canyons, the risk is more acute, officials say. Riverside County has issued warnings to residents of Trabuco Canyon about debris flow potential from the Holy Fire. The state Office of Emergency Services, Cal Fire and others have sent crews there to do prep work.

The ‘fire-flood” debris flow phenomenon is not new. Hydrologis­ts, geologists and others in government and academia have studied post-fire flash floods for decades and know how fast and deadly they can be. One in 2003 killed 14 people at a church camp in San Bernardino.

Debris flows are sometimes described as mudslides, but the two are not the same. Mudslides occur when a hill becomes saturated and large amounts of subsoil slump and slide. Debris flows take only the top layer of soil with them, and run more like flash floods, moving fast and sweeping up debris.

“A debris flow is a flood on steroids,” said Jason Kean, a United States Geological Survey research hydrologis­t. “You add rocks, boulders and other objects. That weight, it is lethal. You can’t block it with a sandbag. You can’t outrun a debris flow. You need to get out of the way.”

The January flood storm in Montecito — home to Oprah Winfrey, Ellen DeGeneres, Rob Lowe and other celebritie­s — offered a laboratory­like lesson for emergency operations officials around the western United States.

A somber Winfrey posted a video the next morning of her yard covered ankle deep in mud. She was lucky. Her neighbor wasn’t. “The house in back ... is ... gone,” she said.

It started in early December with the Thomas Fire, then the biggest wildfire in state history, which burned for more than a month, prompting more than 100,000 evacuation­s and destroying 1,000 buildings along miles of coastal mountains.

As emotionall­y exhausted residents returned to their homes post-fire, county and state officials were meeting in war rooms with their eyes on upcoming January storms. In December, county crews cleared out drainage basins to ready them for the flash floods.

Thirty hours before the rainstorm hit, Santa Barbara emergency operations officials issued an evacuation notice to hillside residents.

County emergency management director Rob Lewin said his team suspected the debris flows would follow creeks and watersheds, but didn’t know how far they would spread. So they drew a line across the hill in the middle of town along East Valley Road. Uphill from that line, evacuation­s were mandatory. Downhill, they issued a voluntary evacuation warning.

The storm turned out to be huge, at one point dumping more than a half-inch of water in five minutes on the firebaked hillsides. Officials estimated that some flows racing through neighborho­ods may have been 25 miles per hour and tall enough to engulf vehicles.

 ?? KATIE FALKENBERG/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? Caltrans continued to clean up the 101 freeway on Jan. 15, 2018 in Montecito.
KATIE FALKENBERG/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH Caltrans continued to clean up the 101 freeway on Jan. 15, 2018 in Montecito.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States