The Columbus Dispatch

Southern California rain eases

But north facing renewed storm

- By Robert Jablon

LOS ANGELES — A huge Pacific storm that parked itself over Southern California and unloaded, ravaging roads, opening sinkholes and leading to the deaths of at least two people, eased off Saturday but it was only a temporary reprieve as new storms took aim farther north.

The National Weather Service predicted drying weather through Sunday followed by the return of wet weather in the region. But while flash flood watches for Southern California were canceled, Northern California and the San Francisco Bay Area were facing a weekend return of heavy rain and winds that lashed them earlier in the week before the storm moves out.

“Stronger southerly winds and widespread flooding will be likely as an atmospheri­c river (of moisture) takes aim somewhere along the central California Coast,” a weather statement warned.

The approachin­g rain could cause more problems in the far north where damage to spillways of the Lake Oroville dam forced evacuation of 188,000 people last weekend. As of Saturday, the lake’s water elevation had fallen more than 45 feet.

Meanwhile, authoritie­s up and down the state were dealing with the fallout, including overflowin­g creeks, mudslide threats in foothill areas denuded by previous fires, road collapses and hundreds of toppled trees in neighborho­ods.

Northwest of Sacramento, nearly 200 people were evacuated Saturday as overflowin­g creeks turned the town of Maxwell into a brown pond. Fire Chief Kenny Cohen said nearly 100 homes and the elementary school filled with a couple inches of water before the water began receding.

No injuries were reported. Southern California appeared to dodge any major disasters, but in the desert town of Victorvill­e, several cars were washed down a flooded street, and one man was found dead in a submerged vehicle after others were rescued, San Bernardino County fire spokesman Eric Sherwin said.

And in the Sherman Oaks area of Los Angeles, a man was electrocut­ed when a tree falling in heavy rain downed power lines that hit his car.

Later in nearby Studio City, a sinkhole swallowed two cars, the second on live TV as viewers watched it teeter on the edge before plunging in. Firefighte­rs rescued one person from the first car, and the driver got out of the second before it fell. One driver was taken to the hospital in fair condition.

Inland at the Cajon Pass, the shoulder of Interstate 15 crumbled and sent a parked firetruck spilling over the side, but no one was hurt. The California Department of Transporta­tion estimated emergency repairs to the freeway would cost $3 million.

 ?? PARDO/THE SAN BERNARDINO DAILY PRESS] [DAVID ?? Officials look over the scene where a San Bernardino County Fire Department fire engine fell off the side of Interstate 15 after part of the freeway collapsed on Friday because of heavy rain in Cajon Pass, Calif.
PARDO/THE SAN BERNARDINO DAILY PRESS] [DAVID Officials look over the scene where a San Bernardino County Fire Department fire engine fell off the side of Interstate 15 after part of the freeway collapsed on Friday because of heavy rain in Cajon Pass, Calif.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States