Los Angeles Times

Big storm brings rain, hail, snow

No significan­t debris flows or mudslides are reported, and drier weather is forecast.

- By Hayley Smith and Leila Miller

Thunder and lightning visit a drenched L. A., but debris f lows and mudslides are averted.

Los Angeles’ f irst significan­t storm of the season arrived Sunday night, bringing with it intense lightning, rolling thunder, hail and road hazards, but no significan­t mudslides or debris f lows in recent burn areas.

The storm pummeled Southern California, dropping as much as 12 inches of snow in high- elevation mountain areas and half an inch of rain in downtown L. A. before dawn, according to the National Weather Service.

The drenching continued throughout the day Monday, with showers and rumbles of thunder. Rainfall totals peaked at more than 3 inches in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties, weather forecaster­s said. Whittier, Norwalk and parts of the eastern San Gabriel Valley saw hail. Total snowfall in L. A. County’s mountains was expected to range from 6 to 12 inches at elevations of about 5,000 feet by the evening.

By noon, parts of La Mirada looked as if they were covered in a light dusting of snow after the storm dumped pea- size hail.

The storm carried in a cold front from the Northwest, said David Sweet, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard.

“Everybody saw that, or they were awakened in the middle of the night, when the cold front went through with the thundersto­rms, a little bit of hail, gusty winds and some locally heavy rain,” Sweet said. “This is a rather vigorous system.”

The storm resulted in

slow commutes on freeways and dangerous driving conditions in mountain ranges with snowfall.

Angelenos took to social media to document the storm — the first significan­t rainfall the area has had since April.

“LA Rain” trended on Twitter for several hours.

The L. A. County Fire Department had said residents in recent burn areas could get sandbags at their county f ire station and advised people to avoid f looded areas, f lood channels, catch basins, canyons and waterways vulnerable to f loods.

But the storm did not produce significan­t debris f lows in burn zones, said Lisa Phillips, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service.

Water rescues did occur, however, with the Los Angeles Fire Department deploying 75 air and ground responders — including a swift- water rescue team — to assist a man and woman stranded in the L. A. River near Atwater Village about 3: 30 a. m. The man and woman, estimated to be in their 40s, were surrounded by 4foot- deep storm water f lowing at up to 8 mph, LAFD spokesman Brian Humphrey said.

“Moving water more than ankle- deep can knock you off your feet,” Humphrey said, noting that the river bottom can also get mossy and slippery. “It’s dangerous, and it could have been deadly.”

The man and the woman, who live near the area, were rescued by a tethered inf latable boat, Humphrey said. They declined to be taken to a hospital after they were pulled to safety.

Humphrey emphasized the danger posed by storm water and said people often forgot that debris f lows were common with significan­t rains.

Even animal carcasses and large appliances can move through f lood control channels, arroyos and creeks, he said, and he urged parents to keep children from playing in or near those areas.

“It’s been a long time since we had rain,” he said. “You can easily be pushed a mile or two down the stream and potentiall­y lose your life.”

In Santa Ana, officials with the Orange County Fire Authority rescued two people Monday evening who were trapped inside a f lood control channel.

Thanh Nguyen, a fire captain with the agency, said a rescue team used a boat to reach the man and woman, who were found hanging on to the tunnel to avoid being swept away by rainwater. He didn’t know how the pair had ended up there.

“In moments, you can have a really fast- moving body of water,” Nguyen said.

Some additional showers were expected Monday evening throughout Southern California, but “everything is winding down,” said Phillips, the meteorolog­ist.

“It looks like we have just a few showers left in the area — and I would expect those to decrease in the night,” she said.

The next week should see dry weather in the L. A. area., but gusty winds are expected over the next couple of days in canyons and mountain passes.

 ?? UNDER RAIN CLOUDS Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? and a silhouette­d f lock of seabirds, Cervando Lopez Garcia makes his way to a dumpster after collecting trash near the Malibu Pier.
UNDER RAIN CLOUDS Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times and a silhouette­d f lock of seabirds, Cervando Lopez Garcia makes his way to a dumpster after collecting trash near the Malibu Pier.
 ?? ANTONIO SANCHEZ, Christina House Los Angeles Times ?? 33, of Torrance f ishes in the rain off the Redondo Beach Pier. Rainfall totals peaked at more than 3 inches in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties, forecaster­s said, and Whittier, Norwalk and portions of the eastern San Gabriel Valley saw hail.
ANTONIO SANCHEZ, Christina House Los Angeles Times 33, of Torrance f ishes in the rain off the Redondo Beach Pier. Rainfall totals peaked at more than 3 inches in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties, forecaster­s said, and Whittier, Norwalk and portions of the eastern San Gabriel Valley saw hail.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States