Los Angeles Times

Southland could see rain, snow

Late-winter storm could bring lightning, thunder, hail to Southern California

- By Erin B. Logan City News Service contribute­d to this report.

A late-winter storm could drop up to an inch of rain on L.A. and up to a foot of snow in Southern California mountain ranges.

A winter storm that doused the Bay Area on Tuesday is moving into Southern California, bringing rain and the potential for hail to much of the Los Angeles area and snow to the mountains.

Angelenos can expect steady rain early Wednesday till noon, and snow was expected above 3,500 feet as early as Tuesday night, said Ryan Kittell, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard.

Between 6 and 12 inches of snow is expected in the mountains, and snow levels will drop Wednesday morning, creating potential problems on upper-elevation roadways.

The cold front is expected to dump one-half to 1 inch of rain across L.A. County, and a half-inch more could fall on the foothills. Kittell said there’s also a good chance of thunder and lightning.

“Lighting is a hazard people underestim­ate,” he said. “If you hear thunder, go inside and seek shelter.”

The late-winter storm could produce wind gusts of up to 50 mph amid plummeting temperatur­es, forecaster­s said. Small hail is especially likely late Wednesday afternoon, according to an advisory.

The system is expected to move inland Thursday, but a smaller front could bring isolated thundersto­rms throughout the day.

High surf and dangerous rip currents are also expected through Thursday, according to an advisory. Gusty west to northwest winds could create dangerous boating and driving conditions.

A 24-hour winter storm warning was slated to go into effect at 10 p.m. Tuesday for Los Angeles County mountains, excluding the Santa Monica mountain range. Snow is possible in the foothills around the Antelope and Cuyama valleys, forecaster­s warned.

Snow could blanket Highway 14 and the Antelope Valley foothills, threatenin­g reduced visibility that could delay traffic. Higher elevations of the 5 Freeway, including the Grapevine, could see closures late Tuesday through Thursday.

L.A. County extended a cold weather alert for the Antelope Valley and the mountains through Saturday in anticipati­on of below-freezing temperatur­es.

“Children, the elderly, and people with disabiliti­es or special medical needs are especially vulnerable during cold weather,” said Dr.

Muntu Davis, L.A. County’s health officer. “Extra precaution should be taken to ensure they don’t get too cold when they are outside.”

Drier weather is expected to return by Friday.

This week’s winter storms are not likely to make much of a dent in what has been a critically dry year for California.

December, January and February are typically the wettest part of the water year, which starts Oct. 1. L.A.’s average rainfall total in January is 3.12 inches, but only 2.44 inches fell this January.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? COLD, GUSTY WINDS raise clouds of dust in Long Beach on Tuesday ahead of a storm that’s expected to bring rain to the Southland.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times COLD, GUSTY WINDS raise clouds of dust in Long Beach on Tuesday ahead of a storm that’s expected to bring rain to the Southland.

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