Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Residents cry and hug outside damaged homes after flash floods stun San Diego

- By Denis Poroy, Julie Watson and John Antczak

SAN DIEGO >> Stunned residents, some breaking down in tears, pulled soggy and muddy furniture from their homes in San Diego on Tuesday, a day after flash floods from a torrential storm produced the city's fourth-wettest day in nearly 175 years, an inundation in stark contrast to its image as a balmy seaside paradise.

An astonishin­g 2.73 inches of rain fell Monday in the Pacific Coast city, which normally gets about 2 inches on average for the month of January. It was also the city's rainiest day in January, according to records dating to 1850.

“Nothing is salvageabl­e,” said Deanna Samayoa, who spent Tuesday morning hugging and crying with neighbors outside their homes, surrounded by towering piles of debris and trash.

Vehicles were swept away as people fled amid the torrents coursing through their Shelltown neighborho­od, which is near a drainage canal. Several other pockets in the city also were hit by the deluge. Samayoa's son waded through water up to his neck as he carried a toddler to safety, she said.

“It was horrible,” she said. “Help did not arrive soon enough.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency for San Diego County and Ventura County, which was hit by heavy rains and high surf that caused flooding.

“I find that local authority is inadequate to cope with the magnitude of the damage caused by these winter storms,” Newsom said.

The rain fell quickly in San Diego on Monday morning, submerging streets and freeways, halting traffic, buses and trolleys, and catching many people off guard. Rainfall forecasts had predicted 1 inch on the coast and double that in the mountains.

“The water rose in an hour up to our necks,” said Anna Ramirez, whose mother, Maria Hernandez, also suffered damage to her home nearby. “I had to pull a lady out of the water and she didn't know how to swim. She was crying for her life. It was very scary, very traumatizi­ng.”

Hundreds were rescued from homes, according to a city statement. Firefighte­rs and lifeguards rescued about two dozen people from the rushing San Diego and Tijuana rivers, the fire department said. Two homeless shelters also were evacuated.

It was just sprinkling when Eddie Ochoa and his sister went out for breakfast, but when they returned to their familyowne­d auto body shop, the entire block was flooded and his sister's parked car had been washed away.

“It's never been that bad, ever,” Ochoa said. “It's crazy.”

The Red Cross set up an emergency shelter for those who were displaced.

A rough calculatio­n shows that more than 150 billion gallons of water fell on San Diego County over three days, much of it in a three-tosix-hour period, Ryan Maue, former chief scientist for the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, said in an email to The Associated Press. He said the city's drainage canals and infrastruc­ture are not able to handle such a deluge.

“The rainfall rates and duration ... overwhelme­d the capability of the urban and natural interface to reroute the water back to the ocean especially with so much also falling inland at high elevations,” Maue said.

Hundreds of city workers were sent out in advance to clear storm drains and monitor pump stations, but many of the pump stations reached capacity during the storm and were overwhelme­d, the city statement said.

The city described the stormwater system as aging with limited capacity.

“Monday's record rainfall revealed the fragile state of the City's stormwater infrastruc­ture and the need for significan­t investment­s going forward to prevent the current situation from becoming the new normal for San Diego,” the statement said.

Elsewhere, nearly a foot of snow fell in parts of the Sierra overnight. In Livermore, a woman was rescued Tuesday morning after spending 14 hours on top of her overturned and submerged pickup. 2615 Pacific Coast Highway #329, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254

 ?? DENIS POROY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman walks by cars damaged from floods during a rainstorm Monday in San Diego. The city received a record 2.73inches of rain.
DENIS POROY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman walks by cars damaged from floods during a rainstorm Monday in San Diego. The city received a record 2.73inches of rain.
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