Los Angeles Times

More rain is in the forecast

Amounts in Southland are expected to be small compared with levels earlier in week

- By Joseph Serna joseph.serna@latimes.com Times staff writer Garrett Therolf contribute­d to this report.

Another series of rainstorms is expected in Southern California over the next five days, though forecaster­s say they will pale in comparison to the rain, hail and wind that slammed the region this week.

About a tenth of an inch of rain is expected to fall across the Southland on Saturday as a cold front moves in from the north, said National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Emily Thornton. The bulk of the rain is predicted to land along the Central Coast.

Temperatur­es will hover in the 50s during the day and 40s at night through the middle of next week, although they could approach freezing in the high desert, she said.

Light rain is also expected Monday, and another storm could roll through Wednesday, Thornton said. Rain amounts will be small, she said.

“The next couple [of storms] are weak. We’ll just have to wait for the next one,” Thornton said.

In the meantime, homeowners and public agencies across the region were assessing how they handled the first major El Niño storms of the season.

This week’s storms caused some flooding of roadways and freeways, with relatively modest mudslides in areas recently burned by fires.

But overall, the infrastruc­ture held up despite intense downpours in some areas.

“We will be looking at the modeling and how the water actually flowed,” said Stephen Frasher, spokesman for the Los Angeles County Department of Public Works, “but I haven’t heard of any trouble spot locations that emerged as a surprise from the storm.”

L.A. County’s public works agency continues to focus special attention in parts of Azusa and Glendora near where the Colby fire burned 1,952 acres in 2014, Frasher said. Ventura County officials are keeping an eye on several areas there that recently burned, notably around Solimar Beach. Mudflows from that burn zone created problems Wednesday on the 101 Freeway.

Bill Patzert, climatolog­ist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said this week saw a “textbook” El Niño system from a scientific standpoint.

He noted the storms’ single-file formation over the Pacific, like jetliners queuing for an airport landing. Once they made landfall, the rain fell at a faster clip than during the two previous big El Niño periods, in 1997-98 and 1982-83, Patzert said.

More than 21⁄2 inches of rain fell in four days in downtown Los Angeles this week, according to the National Weather Service. In 1998, it rained only 4 inches downtown for all of January; in 1983, rainfall for the month hit nearly 7 inches, Patzert said. Based on this, the 2016 El Niño — so far at least — is shaping up to be impressive, he said.

 ?? Glenn Koenig
Los Angeles Times ?? PEOPLE take in the sunset at Hilltop Park in Signal Hill on Friday. About a tenth of an inch of rain is expected in the area Saturday as a cold front moves in from the north. The bulk of the rain is expected to fall along the Central Coast.
Glenn Koenig Los Angeles Times PEOPLE take in the sunset at Hilltop Park in Signal Hill on Friday. About a tenth of an inch of rain is expected in the area Saturday as a cold front moves in from the north. The bulk of the rain is expected to fall along the Central Coast.
 ?? Brian van der Brug
Los Angeles Times ?? THE STORMS this week caused some f looding of roadways and freeways, with relatively modest mudslides in areas recently burned by fires. Above, a Caltrans worker Wednesday helps to clear drains on the 5 Freeway.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times THE STORMS this week caused some f looding of roadways and freeways, with relatively modest mudslides in areas recently burned by fires. Above, a Caltrans worker Wednesday helps to clear drains on the 5 Freeway.

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