The Day

Southern California Dreamin’: Snow

Powerful storm brings white stuff to the suburbs of Los Angeles

- By JOHN ANTCZAK and KEN KUSMER

Los Angeles — A powerful winter storm that swept down the West Coast with flooding and frigid temperatur­es shifted its focus to southern California on Saturday, swelling rivers to dangerous levels and dropping snow in even low-lying areas around Los Angeles.

The National Weather Service said it was one of the strongest storms to ever hit southwest California and even as the volume of wind and rain dropped, it continued to have significan­t impact including snowfall down to elevations as low as 1,000 feet. Hills around suburban Santa Clarita, north of Los Angeles, were blanketed in white, and snow also surprised inland suburbs to the east.

Rare blizzard warnings for the mountains and widespread flood watches were ending late in the day as the storm tapered off in the region. Forecaster­s said there would be a oneday respite before the next storm arrives on Monday.

After days of fierce winds, toppled trees and downed wires, more than 120,000 California utility customers remained without electricit­y, according to PowerOutag­e.us. And Interstate 5, the West Coast’s major northsouth highway, remained closed due to heavy snow and ice in Tejon Pass through the mountains north of Los Angeles.

81 inches of snow in mountains

Multiday precipitat­ion totals as of Saturday morning included a staggering 81 inches of snow at the Mountain High resort in the San Gabriel Mountains northeast of Los Angeles and up to 64 inches farther east at Snow Valley in the San Bernardino Mountains.

Rainfall totals as of late Saturday morning were equally stunning, including nearly 15 inches at Los Angeles County’s Cogswell Dam and nearly 10.5 inches in the Woodland Hills section of Los Angeles.

“Quite a remarkable storm the last few days with historic amounts of precip and snow down to elevations that rarely see snow,” the LA-area weather office wrote.

The Los Angeles River and other waterways that normally flow at a trickle or are dry most of the year were raging with runoff Saturday. The Los Angeles Fire Department used a helicopter to rescue four homeless people who were stranded in the river’s major flood control basin. Two were taken to a hospital with hypothermi­a, said spokesman Brian Humphrey.

In the Valencia area of north Los Angeles County, the roiling Santa Clara River carried away three motorhomes early Saturday after carving into an embankment where an RV park

is located. No one was hurt, KCAL-TV reported, but one resident described the scene as devastatin­g.

The storm, fueled by low pressure rotating off the coast, did not depart quietly. Lightning strikes shut down L.A. County beaches and scattered bursts of snow, showers and thundersto­rms persisted.

Derek Maiden, 57, who lives in a tent in LA’s Echo Park neighborho­od, collected cans in the rain to take to a recycling center. He said this winter has been wetter than usual. “It’s miserable when you’re outside in the elements,” he said.

Problems elsewhere

Meanwhile, people farther east were struggling to deal with the fallout from storms earlier this past week.

More than 350,000 customers were without power in Michigan as of early Saturday afternoon, according to reports from the the two main utilities in the state, DTE and Consumers Energy. Both said they hope to have the lights back on for most of their customers by tonight.

Brian Wheeler, a spokesman for Consumers Energy, said half an inch of ice weighed down some power lines — equivalent to the weight of a baby grand piano.

“People are not just angry but struggling,” said Em Perry, environmen­tal justice director for Michigan United, a group that advocates for economic and racial justice. “People are huddling under blankets for warmth.”

She said the group will demand that utilities reimburse residents for the

cost to purchase generators or replace spoiled groceries.

In Kalamazoo, Mich., Allison Rinker was using a borrowed generator to keep her 150-year-old house warm Saturday after two nights in the cold and dark.

“We were all surviving, but spirits were low on the second day,” she said. “As soon as the heat came back and we were able to have one or two lights running, it was like a complete flip in attitude.”

After driving to a relative’s home to store food, Rinker, 27, compared the destructio­n of trees to tornado damage.

“The ice that was falling off the trees

as it was melting was hitting our windshield so hard, I was afraid it was going to crack,” she said. “There’s just tree limbs everywhere, half of the trees just falling down. The destructio­n is insane.”

Back in California, the Weather Prediction Center of the National Weather Service forecast heavy snow over the Cascade Mountains and the Sierra Nevada through the weekend.

The low-pressure system was also expected to bring widespread rain and snow in southern Nevada by Saturday afternoon and across northwest Arizona Saturday night and this morning, the National Weather Service office in Las Vegas said.

 ?? DOUG DURAN /BAY AREA NEWS GROUP VIA AP ?? Jaden Shabry, 15, of Boulder Creek, Calif., plays in the snow after a snowstorm that hit the West Coast on Friday. The snow came from an intense, cold winter storm that forced the closure of Highway 17, leading to the Santa Cruz Mountains.
DOUG DURAN /BAY AREA NEWS GROUP VIA AP Jaden Shabry, 15, of Boulder Creek, Calif., plays in the snow after a snowstorm that hit the West Coast on Friday. The snow came from an intense, cold winter storm that forced the closure of Highway 17, leading to the Santa Cruz Mountains.
 ?? WILL LESTER/THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER VIA AP ?? Jacob Polanco, left, 8, and his older sister Khloe, 9, make snow angels Saturday after snow fell in their neighborho­od at approximat­ely the 1,400-foot level in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.
WILL LESTER/THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER VIA AP Jacob Polanco, left, 8, and his older sister Khloe, 9, make snow angels Saturday after snow fell in their neighborho­od at approximat­ely the 1,400-foot level in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.

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