Los Angeles Times

Evacuation orders lifted after storm

Evacuation­s are lifted, and pre-storm plans minimized damage, authoritie­s say.

- By Melissa Etehad and Hailey Branson-Potts

Santa Barbara County areas devastated by deadly mudslides in January were spared from major damage by Friday’s cold and wet winter weather.

MONTECITO, Calif. — The arctic storm that moved through Southern California on Friday brought significan­t showers to punctuate one of the driest winters on record but was not powerful enough to cause the kind of extensive damage that some officials had feared.

Rain from the Gulf of Alaska storm that swept into the region overnight stuck around for several hours, causing mud and debris f lows that prompted the closure of some roadways in Los Angeles, Ventura and Santa Barbara counties.

Topanga Canyon Boulevard in Malibu was closed in both directions between Grand View Drive and Pacific Coast Highway because of a mud- and rockslide, said California Highway Patrol Officer Stephanie Norton. It was not clear when the roadway would be reopened.

Still, those who had braced for the worst after January’s deadly mudslides in Montecito experience­d minimal damage to their communitie­s and saw their mandatory evacuation­s lifted early in the day.

“Together we made it,” Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown said in a statement. He added that the evacuation orders for as many as 30,000 people created “a tremendous hardship and we did not make this decision lightly.”

Santa Barbara County officials said the clearing of flood control channels after the Jan. 9 storm that swept away homes and killed 21 people in Montecito prevented problems with Friday’s storm system.

“We are cautiously optimistic that due to a significan­t amount of pre-storm

preparatio­n we have come through this with minimal impact,” Rob Lewin, director of the county’s Office of Emergency Management, said in a statement.

“Crews are currently completing assessment of all roads, debris basins, conditions of utilities and other public facilities for damage or impact.”

Montecito Fire Department Capt. Jordan Zeitsoff said creeks held up well in areas that were most at risk of mudslides and that there were no major road closures or significan­t flooding.

He added that residents complied with evacuation orders more promptly than during January’s deluge.

“Now we just have to prepare for the next storm that will come,” he said.

The CHP said that the 101 Freeway remained open but that authoritie­s were monitoring the roadway in case a closure became necessary.

The storm had a “pretty good intensity” over Santa Barbara and Ventura counties before dawn Friday, said Stuart Seto, a weather specialist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard. The heaviest precipitat­ion occurred over the Santa Ynez Mountains, where rain was coming down at about half an inch per hour.

The rainfall slightly exceeded the projected total in Santa Barbara County, falling at a rate of 0.6 of an inch per hour, officials said.

After days of hearing warnings about the impending storm, those in Montecito settled back into routine by Friday morning.

As a light drizzle fell, Manuel Cedeno continued along his usual route on East Valley Road as he collected garbage from bins for a sanitation company.

“Things seem to be getting

‘We are cautiously optimistic that ... we have come through this with minimal impact.’ — Rob Lewin, director of Office of Emergency Management

back to normal,” Cedeno said.

By about 8:30 p.m., the Santa Barbara County mountains had seen a maximum of about 3 ½ inches of rain, while Ventura County received as much as 3.15 inches, according to National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Robbie Munroe.

In Los Angeles County, the storm brought 3 ½ inches to the Santa Monica Mountains, 1.41 inches to Beverly Hills and 0.51 of an inch to downtown Los Angeles.

The Los Angeles County mountains were expected to receive up to 12 inches of snow, with some areas receiving up to 18 inches, according to the weather service. The mountains in Ventura County will receive slightly less. By Saturday, Interstate 5 through the Grapevine could see a few inches of snow, Seto said.

In Northern California, an avalanche closed the Squaw Valley ski resort in the afternoon. No injuries were reported, according to the Placer County Sheriff ’s Office.

But earlier in the day, the office identified the body of a snowboarde­r — Wenyu Zhang, 42, of Rocklin, Calif. — who had gone missing Thursday night at a Lake Tahoe ski resort during a blizzard. The cause of death has not been determined.

The weather conditions brought a rare wet day for Southern California, which has seen well-below average rainfall, sparking concerns about a return of drought conditions.

Some, however, remained troubled about what could still come.

Sara Miller McCune, the founder of a publishing company, settled in Montecito two decades ago and recently moved into a new home on San Ysidro Road.

The threat of fire and mudslides has been taxing for the 77-year-old.

Exiting her white Jaguar with the help of an assistant who carried her blue suitcase, McCune said she can’t shake a feeling of anxiety for the home she bought so she could build a library.

“There’s boulders sitting there ready to come down,” she said, motioning to the burned hillside. “At this point, I don’t know how to feel.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Michael Owen Baker For The Times ?? FEDERAL OFFICIALS Jerry Grigsby and Melinda Roussos check a residence in Montecito, Calif. The area did sustain light damage from an arctic storm Friday, but mandatory evacuation­s were lifted early in the day.
Photograph­s by Michael Owen Baker For The Times FEDERAL OFFICIALS Jerry Grigsby and Melinda Roussos check a residence in Montecito, Calif. The area did sustain light damage from an arctic storm Friday, but mandatory evacuation­s were lifted early in the day.
 ??  ?? MARK VANCE shovels excess mud outside his Montecito home that was left over from the Jan. 9 storm that swept away homes and killed 21 people.
MARK VANCE shovels excess mud outside his Montecito home that was left over from the Jan. 9 storm that swept away homes and killed 21 people.

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