Yuma Sun

Normally at a crawl, L.A. River threatens to overflow during torrential rains

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LOS ANGELES – It’s easy to forget that a river runs through the heart of Los Angeles. Normally flowing at a crawl, much of it through nondescrip­t concrete channels, the Los Angeles River picks up speed during the rainy season.

By Monday, fed by a slow-moving atmospheri­c river dumping historic amounts of rain, the river was raging and even threatened to overspill its flood-control barriers in some sections.

In a dramatic river rescue Monday afternoon, an LA Fire Department helicopter crew pulled a man from the turbulent water after he jumped in to save his dog when the animal was swept away by the current. The man was hoisted to safety and flown to a hospital. The dog was able to swim to safety.

The deluge raised concerns for the region’s large population of homeless people, many of whom set up encampment­s along the river and on small dirt outcroppin­gs and brush-covered islands. First responders patrolled the river and swift-water rescue teams were poised to deploy.

The river wanders through 14 cities from the San Fernando Valley through downtown Los Angeles and south to Long Beach, where it empties into the ocean. It once flowed much more freely.

A 1939 flood that wiped out neighborho­ods prompted officials to hem in the riverbanks with concrete. For decades, the 51-mile (82-kilometer) waterway largely existed as a noman’s land, a fenced-off, garbage-strewn scar running through the city. It served as an occasional set for Hollywood movies – “Grease” and “Terminator 2: Judgment Day” among them – and frequent canvas for graffiti artists.

The city’s relationsh­ip to the river changed when in 2010 the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency deemed the river navigable and subject to the protection­s of the Clean Water Act.

A year later, the Corps of Engineers began permitting kayaking along stretches north of downtown where the bottom is soft brown dirt instead of concrete. Habitat was restored and herons, egrets and other birds arrived to pick through grassy shallows shaded by willows and cottonwood­s.

Even in the verdant sections, there are of course reminders of city life such as tents, overturned grocery carts and litter.

In 2014, the Army Corps recommende­d approval of the city’s plan to widen the river, create wetlands and invite new commercial and residentia­l developmen­t. Much of the proposal is still in the planning stages.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES/AP ?? SURGING WATER FILLS THE LOS ANGELES RIVER where it runs alongside the Golden State Freeway on Feb. 22, 2005.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES/AP SURGING WATER FILLS THE LOS ANGELES RIVER where it runs alongside the Golden State Freeway on Feb. 22, 2005.

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