Porterville Recorder

Evacuation­s ordered in mudslide area

- CHRISTOPHE­R WEBER and OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ

LOS ANGELES — A major winter storm swept south through California on Thursday, bringing heavy snow and strong winds to mountains and steady rain elsewhere, while prompting mandatory evacuation­s for coastal areas to the south that were devastated by deadly mudslides in January.

As many as 30,000 people were ordered to leave an area of Santa Barbara County before the storm arrived early Friday.

Sheriff Bill Brown said forecaster­s weren't certain how intense the storm would be when it arrives in Southern California. However, modeling indicates "there is a risk for dangerous flash flooding, mud and debris flows," he warned.

"I'm not going anywhere," Montecito resident Harriet Mosson said.

The 76-year-old said the three-story condo building where she lives was not damaged in January because it's on the ocean side of U.S. 101, which helped divert the mudslides that came down the mountains.

"Can it happen again? Yeah, I guess it can. Will it, now? I doubt it," she said. "And if something terrible happens I'll be able to get out of here."

People cannot be forced to leave their homes under a mandatory evacuation order, but authoritie­s said they should not be expected to be rescued while the storm event is occurring.

To the north, a blizzard warning was issued for parts of the Sierra Nevada, where winds could gust up to 125 mph on ridges and 60 mph in some valleys, the National Weather Service said.

The cold front is expected to bring snow to foothill areas as low as 3,500 feet, and officials warned people to stay off mountain roads.

The California Department of Transporta­tion said 90-miles stretch of Interstate 80 was closed between Colfax, California, and the Nevada state line due to whiteout conditions.

Chains or snow tires were needed on stretches of Interstate 80, U.S. 50 and U.S. 395. Dozens of collisions were reported on San Francisco Bay Area highways.

Northern mountains were expected to receive as much as 5 feet of snow and reach 7 feet in some areas.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY JAMES QUIGG ?? Lantry Road became a difficult hill to climb as a winter storm left few inches of snow in Oak Hills area in Hesperia Tuesday.
AP PHOTO BY JAMES QUIGG Lantry Road became a difficult hill to climb as a winter storm left few inches of snow in Oak Hills area in Hesperia Tuesday.

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