Los Angeles Times

Storms aid battle against wildfires

Firefighte­rs dampen blazes in Cajon Pass and Angeles National Forest as unusual rain system moves in.

- By Javier Panzar, Sarah Parvini and Bettina Boxall

Scattered thundersto­rms and showers Saturday knocked out power for thousands, closed Los Angeles County beaches and put a damper on the North fire in the Cajon Pass.

By Saturday afternoon, the 3,500-acre wildfire that had shut down Interstate 15 and sent motorists f leeing on foot Friday had been stopped in its tracks by moisture streaming north from a tropical storm off Baja California. The fire was 45% contained.

“It’s just creeping around now,” said U.S. Forest Service spokeswoma­n Carol Underhill. “It definitely stopped its big movement.”

Fueled by chaparral and grass and fanned by high winds, the blaze spread onto the southbound lanes of the busy freeway Friday afternoon. Panicked travelers abandoned their vehicles and ran into the hills.

Twenty vehicles, including two tractor-trailers, were destroyed. But miraculous­ly, authoritie­s said, no injuries were reported. All lanes of the I-15, the major route between Southern California and Las Vegas, were reopened by Saturday afternoon.

The unusual summer

storm system spread a dramatic display of thunder and lightning across the region, prompting lifeguards to close all Los Angeles County beaches, once in the morning and again in the afternoon.

About 10,000 Los Angeles-area residents were left without power from Lincoln Heights to South L.A., as well as in the Vermont-Slauson, Westlake and University Park neighborho­ods.

The L.A. Department of Water and Power was unsure when electricit­y would be restored. “I can’t put guys on the poles if there’s lightning going through them,” DWP spokeswoma­n Kim Hughes said.

An Alaska Airlines jet bound for Washington, D.C., returned to Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport shortly after a 1:08 p.m. takeoff because the pilot suspected the aircraft had been struck by lightning.

The Boeing 737 landed safely and taxied to the gate, and the 159 passengers and six crew members safely disembarke­d.

“The pilot noticed that it was likely struck by lightning, and out of an abundance of caution [decided] to turn around and land,” Alaska Airlines spokeswoma­n Bobbie Egan said.

“We have maintenanc­e technician­s who are currently inspecting the aircraft to determine if we’re going to pull it from service or cancel the f light,” she said Saturday afternoon. “Lightning strikes do happen; when they do, the plane is designed to withstand a lightning strike.”

The rainy weather also helped firefighte­rs reach 35% containmen­t of the 200acre Pines fire, which erupted in the Angeles National Forest on Friday evening. “It was a game-changer for sure,” Forest Service spokesman Nathan Judy said of the storm’s arrival.

The blaze, burning in timber, closed a stretch of Highway 2 from Wrightwood to Big Pines. Several campground­s and a Girl Scout camp were evacuated.

About 10 p.m. Friday, officials woke up campers, who grabbed as many belongings as they could and filed onto buses and into sheriff ’s vehicles that transporte­d them to a local high school, Forest Service spokeswoma­n L’Tanga Watson said.

The cause of both blazes remains under investigat­ion.

The North fire charred brush lands in the San Bernardino National Forest and also burned private holdings in Baldy Mesa. There, three homes, eight outbuildin­gs and 44 vehicles, a number of them apparently junked, were destroyed.

A half-dozen air tankers — including a DC-10 — three helicopter­s and 1,000 firefighte­rs battled the blaze as news helicopter­s recorded the war-like scene of burning cars.

Authoritie­s halted air attacks for about 25 minutes Friday when a drone flew near the fire. It was the third time in a matter of weeks that drones have interfered with aerial responses to Southern California wildfires.

On Saturday morning, Phelan resident Andrew Eblen surveyed the piles of burnt wood and singed metal that had been his childhood home.

Eblen, 21, said he and his fiancee, Britany Carpenter, spent $5,000 renovating the home and had planned to live there with their 7month-old son, Eli.

“There’s nothing left,” he said.

Eblen’s parents, who still lived in the house, were out of town when the fire roared through. “Yesterday was complete panic. Now it’s what do we do next?” Eblen said.

Terry Ledoux saw smoke coming over the Cajon Pass as she headed to her car Friday afternoon.

She went back inside her home, and shortly thereafter a firefighte­r gave her and her husband, Scott, 10 minutes to leave; winds were approachin­g 50 mph.

The Baldy Mesa couple started gathering their documents and dogs. Scott Ledoux opened their garage door. “Alls I saw was orange,” he recalled.

He carried his mother-inlaw, who lives with them, to the swimming pool. Terry Ledoux grabbed the dogs.

They stood in the filled pool for about 10 minutes as the fire swept over their house and surrounded them. When the flames died down, they made a break for their truck and sped out of their neighborho­od, soaking wet and covered in soot.

They spent the night at the prison where Scott Ledoux works as a correction­al officer. They returned Saturday morning to find their home still intact.

“I’m so grateful,” Terry Ledoux said, wiping away tears. “When we turned the corner, we weren’t sure.”

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? THE NORTH FIRE, which temporaril­y shut down Interstate 15 in the Cajon Pass and destroyed vehicles, was 45% contained after scattered storms Saturday.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times THE NORTH FIRE, which temporaril­y shut down Interstate 15 in the Cajon Pass and destroyed vehicles, was 45% contained after scattered storms Saturday.
 ?? Harry Chandler
For The Times ?? ABOUT 10,000 Los Angeles-area residents were left without power and all L.A. County beaches were temporaril­y closed twice as an unusual summer storm system presented a dramatic display of thunder and lightning.
Harry Chandler For The Times ABOUT 10,000 Los Angeles-area residents were left without power and all L.A. County beaches were temporaril­y closed twice as an unusual summer storm system presented a dramatic display of thunder and lightning.

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