Los Angeles Times

After battering the north, rains reach Southland

- TIMES STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS

A new storm moved into Southern California on Friday, bringing with it light but sustained rain.

Showers should continue through Friday night and Saturday morning. The storm will then move out, and the weekend should be marked by partly cloudy skies, according to the National Weather Service.

But another storm could move in by Thursday night.

Thanks to a wet winter, downtown Los Angeles already has recorded 15.7 inches of rain since the Oct. 1 start of the water year, exceeding its annual rainfall total with the season far from over.

In the north, which reeled this week from fierce downpours, rising water and damaging mudslides, the rain tapered off. But problems persisted even as the weather headed for at least a temporary dry period.

In Butte County, workers scrambled to rescue millions of baby salmon from a hatchery being buried in mud from the crumbling spillway of Oroville Dam. The fish were evacuated by tanker trucks.

State officials also said they might be able to avoid water releases from the dam’s emergency spillway. The integrity of the dam itself was not jeopardize­d.

Elsewhere, flood warnings were to remain in effect until Saturday morning for the Russian River near Guernevill­e in the Sonoma County redwood country north of San Francisco.

A vast swath of the state’s northern interior was under flood warnings until midmorning Saturday.

“Heavy rainfall over the past several days has resulted in high river levels and stream flows throughout interior Northern California,” the National Weather Service said. “Even though rainfall will taper off after today, runoff will continue and many rivers and streams will remain high with continued fast stream flows.”

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