Miami Herald (Sunday)

Southern California heat wave breaks with spotty rain

- BY JULIE WATSON AND JOHN ANTCZAK Associated Press

SAN DIEGO

Southern California­ns welcomed cooler temperatur­es and spotty rain Saturday from a tropical storm veering off the Pacific Coast days after a relentless heat wave nearly overwhelme­d the state’s electrical grid.

Officials braced for flooding in coastal and mountain areas from the storm and feared powerful winds could expand the massive Fairview Fire about 75 miles southeast of Los Angeles. But minimal flooding was reported early Saturday and crews made significan­t progress on the fire and said they expected full containmen­t on Monday. More than 10,000 homes and other structures have been threatened by the blaze.

“It did bring rain, it did bring higher humidities, and of course that’s always a blessing when it comes to fires,” said Cal Fire Battalion

Chief Issac Sanchez.

The National Weather Service forecast an end to the grueling heat wave in the Los Angeles area Saturday though heat and wind advisories remained in effect through the evening, and warned of possible flooding in mountain areas and some beach communitie­s. In San Diego County, inland areas such as Mt. Laguna and Julian received several inches of rain while coastal communitie­s got less than an inch, the National Weather Service reported.

Scattered showers and thundersto­rms were expected in Southern California through Monday, with mountainou­s regions getting more rain, state fire officials said. While residents in the southern portion of the state enjoyed a respite from the stifling heat, officials warned those living further north remained at risk for a heat wave and wildfire conditions with the potential for lightning Sunday across the Northern Sierra.

Hurricane Kay made landfall near Mexico’s Bahia Asuncion in Baja California Sur state Thursday, but it quickly weakened into a tropical storm by the time it reached Southern California. The tropical conditions added a swelter to the heat wave that saw temperatur­es soar past 100 degrees Fahrenheit in many parts of California this week.

Some residents welcomed the respite from unusually high temperatur­es.

“The heat was killer, so for now this feels good,” Charles Jenkins said as rain fell Friday in San Diego.

With flooding possible, officials in coastal cities posted warning signs and made sandbags available to the public. In Orange County’s Seal Beach, a beach parking lot had minor flooding at high tide Friday.

In the parched desert communitie­s near Palm Springs, some local roads closed briefly due to flooding from rain, the Desert Sun reported.

While firefighte­rs made progress against the Fairview Fire, the fast-moving Mosquito Fire in the foothills east of Sacramento grew to at least 51 square miles and threatened

3,600 homes in Placer and El Dorado counties while blanketing the region in smoke. More than 5,700 people in the area have been evacuated, authoritie­s said.

Temperatur­es have fallen in the northern parts of the state, but the storm has had less of an impact there and wildfire conditions prevail, Sanchez said.

“We’re not seeing a correspond­ing drop in fire activity at this point,” he said.

September already has produced one of the hottest and longest heat waves on record for California and some other Western states. Nearly 54 million people were under heat warnings and advisories across the region this week as temperatur­e records were shattered in many areas.

California’s state capital of Sacramento hit an alltime high Tuesday of 116 degrees, breaking a 97year-old record. Salt Lake City tied its all-time high temperatur­e Wednesday at 107 degrees.

On Saturday, fire officials said they’d been unable to corral any part of the Mosquito Fire so far. It has burned near the town of Foresthill, home to about 1,500 people, where David Hance slept on the porch of his mother’s mobile home when he woke up to a glowing red sky early Wednesday morning and was ordered to evacuate.

“It was actually fricking terrifying, cause they say, ‘Oh, yeah, it’s coming closer,’ ” he said. “It was like sunset in the middle of the night.”

 ?? THOMAS WELLS The Northeast Mississipp­i Daily Journal ?? Members of the Tupelo (Miss.) Running Club gather for a moment of silence before they begin their ‘Liza’s Lights’ run early Friday morning to remember Eliza Fletcher, who was abducted and murdered while running in the early morning hours in Memphis.
THOMAS WELLS The Northeast Mississipp­i Daily Journal Members of the Tupelo (Miss.) Running Club gather for a moment of silence before they begin their ‘Liza’s Lights’ run early Friday morning to remember Eliza Fletcher, who was abducted and murdered while running in the early morning hours in Memphis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States