Los Angeles Times

Storm brings slides, f looding

Record rainfall sends one home crashing into another, forces multiple evacuation­s.

- By Hannah Fry

Shifting earth sends Bay Area home into another and shuts roads in Southland.

A fierce winter storm packed with subtropica­l moisture continued its destructiv­e path across California on Thursday, triggering widespread flooding that prompted evacuation­s and unleashing a mudslide that sent one home sliding into another in Marin County.

Southern Marin fire officials said the mudslide dislodged the home from its foundation and pushed it down a hill before it slammed into another residence shortly before 3 a.m.

Rescuers pulled a woman from the wreckage after they saw her hand sticking out of the debris. She was caked in mud as officials wheeled her on a stretcher into an ambulance and took her to a hospital. Officials evacuated 50 homes in the area after the hillside gave way.

“Surprising­ly, she was in great condition,” Southern Marin Fire District Capt. Doug Paterson said of the woman.

“She was talking to us. She was alert. She was able to tell us exactly what had happened.”

The storm, known as an atmospheri­c river, pounded Northern California with torrential rain beginning late Tuesday before it arrived in the Southland overnight Wednesday. Venado, an unincorpor­ated town in the North Bay, was doused with 12.44 inches of rain in 48 hours.

Other Bay Area cities also got a solid soaking. San Francisco received more than 3 inches of rain in the same time frame and faced wind gusts of up to 50 mph. The conditions prompted the National Weather Service to issue a flash-flood watch and high-wind warning for the region.

The 1.94 inches of rain that fell in downtown Sacramento on Wednesday broke the record of 1.61 inches set in 1926, according to the weather service.

Residents in Northern California’s Butte County — where the Camp fire carved a path of devastatio­n last year — were told to leave their homes Thursday morning amid concerns that heavy rain could cause Rock Creek to overflow and inundate their communitie­s.

Laguna Beach in Orange County faced a similar concern hours later, prompting officials to evacuate a cluster of homes and businesses along Laguna Canyon Road. Officials warned residents on social media and made announceme­nts over a loudspeake­r at the city’s beaches that Laguna Canyon Creek had reached levels that could trigger flooding in the city’s downtown.

Forecaster­s said San Diego, Orange and Riverside counties were hit hard during the storm. Some areas saw more than 3 inches of rain along the coast and more than 10 inches at higher elevations, said Casey Oswant, a meteorolog­ist with the weather service in San Diego.

“Usually these storms are stronger up north, but this one is hitting our area much harder,” said James Brotherton, a meteorolog­ist with the weather service in San Diego. “It’s definitely stronger than others we’ve experience­d, and it’s likely the strongest we’ve seen this winter.”

Some residents whose communitie­s were affected by last year’s Holy fire in Riverside and Orange counties were told to leave their homes before the brunt of the storm hit Thursday.

About 3.5 inches of rain had fallen on the region by 11 a.m. Thursday, which was enough to send deep rivers of mud down creeks in both counties. A torrent of mud that made its way through Lake Elsinore caused the outer wall of a property to collapse, but widespread damage hadn’t been reported.

Outside of evacuated areas, morning commuters were met with flooded roads, closures, spinouts and significan­t delays that continued through the day.

Downtown Los Angeles saw nearly 2 inches of precipitat­ion. That means the area has seen 15.26 inches of rain this water year, which began Oct. 1, surpassing the annual average of 14.93 inches.

“We’re definitely past that,” said Kristen Stewart, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service.

More than an inch of precipitat­ion fell in Long Beach over 24 hours, and heavy rain flooded the northbound side of the 710 Freeway, trapping at least one car as earlymorni­ng motorists drove through the torrent.

Flooding along Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach forced officials to close a portion of the scenic road from Seapoint Street to Warner Avenue. Rocks that tumbled from a hillside onto Malibu Canyon Road cracked the windshield of at least one car, and mud that slid down onto the roadway blocked a section of Topanga Canyon Boulevard.

Some areas of the San Gabriel Mountains saw more than 6 inches of rain Wednesday and Thursday, Stewart said.

Several school districts and colleges — from Sonoma County to San Diego — canceled classes because of flooding and power outages. Wet weather forced Knott’s Berry Farm and Six Flags Magic Mountain to close and forced suspension of play at the Genesis Open golf tournament at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades.

Slick roads caused hazards in San Diego, where the plume of subtropica­l moisture dropped nearly 6 inches of rain in some areas early in the day. Three firefighte­rs with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection were taken to a hospital after their engine careened off the road and overturned north of Escondido about 6:15 a.m. The storm also generated strong wind that shook commercial jets during takeoffs and landings at San Diego Internatio­nal Airport.

The storm arrived amid what has already been a wet winter for California­ns.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion issued an El Niño advisory on Thursday, indicating the climate pattern has taken effect and is likely to continue. Forecaster­s say there is about a 55% chance that El Niño conditions will continue through the spring.

But the slow formation of the El Niño weather conditions is not what has caused the state’s recent storms, said Michelle L’Heureux, a meteorolog­ist with the weather service’s Climate Prediction Center. She said the El Niño would be weak through April.

A much more random phenomenon taking place in the central tropical Pacific — the Madden Julian Oscillatio­n — is what has been causing the on-and-off rainfall since its formation in October, she said. The Madden Julian Oscillatio­n is a fast-moving weather pattern that creates a jet stream extending to the northern Pacific Ocean.

Together, El Niño and the Madden Julian Oscillatio­n will make it more likely for rain on the West Coast through the end of February, L’Heureux said.

“It looks like roughly every time an MJO gets in a certain state, we’re seeing rainfall along the West Coast,” she said. “And it’s still going on.”

Times staff writers Alejandra Reyes-Velarde, Alene Tchekmedyi­an and Rong-Gong Lin II, San Diego Union-Tribune staff writer Karen Kucher and the Associated Press contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Mark Boster For The Times ?? RAIN-SWOLLEN Trabuco Creek in Orange County overwhelms a guardrail as it overf lows a bridge at Trabuco Canyon Road. The nearby Holy fire burn scar added mud, trees and boulders to the flow of debris.
Mark Boster For The Times RAIN-SWOLLEN Trabuco Creek in Orange County overwhelms a guardrail as it overf lows a bridge at Trabuco Canyon Road. The nearby Holy fire burn scar added mud, trees and boulders to the flow of debris.

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