NATIONAL NEWS

Southern Californians recount harrowing mudslides during deadly record-breaking storm

Feb 6, 2024, 9:51 PM | Updated: Feb 7, 2024, 9:00 pm

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jesus Barron answered his wife’s panicked phone call warning him that a mudslide was smashing into their bedroom in the hills of eastern Los Angeles County. Then, the line went dead.

“She called me and told me the mountain was coming down,” he recalled Wednesday. “I thought the worst.”

Wendy Barron escaped their Hacienda Heights home during Tuesday’s historic downpours in Southern California, but it was seriously damaged when mud flowed down the hillside and blasted through the two retaining walls the family built when they moved in seven years ago.

“It’s not enough to stop Mother Nature, of course,” Jesus Barron said.

The storm fueled by the second of back-to-back atmospheric rivers to hit California in days came ashore last weekend in the state’s north before it moved down the coast and parked itself over the south for days, turning roads into rivers, causing hundreds of landslides and killing at least nine people.

The final punch came Wednesday afternoon and evening as heavy rain drenched the region. The forecast was for a potential dump of an additional 1 to 3 inches (2.5 to 7.6 centimeters) of rain in parts of Los Angeles and San Diego counties and snow and thunderstorms at higher elevations.

Winter storm warnings and advisories continued in Southern California mountains and to the north in the Sierra Nevada.

The National Weather Service said that around 4 p.m. Wednesday, there were reports of a possible tornado in San Luis Obispo County on California’s central coast. Authorities said either the swirling gusts of a tornado or severe straight-line winds toppled trees and power lines, tore up asphalt from streets and caused some building damage in Grover Beach and Pismo Beach.

A tree fell outside a Grover Beach tile and flooring store Wednesday afternoon, although owner Brittany Prince said she didn’t hear it go because of the wind.

“We looked outside and saw things blowing down the street,” she told the Tribune of San Luis Obispo. “I came out to go close the rollup door, and things were flying, so I just left it. I went back inside to make sure we were safe and then I looked out and saw the tree was down.”

The storm was expected to ease off again and move off Thursday or Friday, giving way to fair weather for most of the state by the weekend.

But even after the rain, authorities warned of the ongoing threat of collapsing hillsides. After all of the rain and snow of the past week, it wouldn’t take much for more water, mud and boulders to sluice down fragile hillsides, experts said. At least 520 mudslides have already occurred in Los Angeles alone.

Even before the evening drenching, the storm had dumped more than a foot (30 centimeters) of rain in some areas, making it one of the wettest periods on record for the Southern California.

The Barrons’ home is too damaged for them to live in for the next few months, though the couple was able to retrieve some belongings. Now, they need to decide whether they want to return once it’s repaired.

“We love it here,” Jesus Barron said. “However, it wouldn’t be easy to go through this again.”

Jill Shinefield has lived in Beverly Crest, a neighborhood in the Santa Monica Mountains, for 23 years. She watched this week as her neighbors evacuated and other homes got damaged by mudslides. She chose to stay because her home is not up against the hillside.

“We have in the past been concerned about fires, but we’ve never even really thought about mudslides,” she said.

Around 430 trees fell in Los Angeles alone, the city said, and work crews have struggled to deal with the storm’s aftermath.

One tree that held firm helped protect a home Sunday night in the Studio City neighborhood. The carob tree and an SUV that had been pushed out of its parking space by mud blocked debris from crashing into Scott Toro’s home when a mudslide hit his community.

“The mud came down the hill and it stopped 3 feet (about a meter) short of our front door,” Toro recalled Wednesday as he cleaned up his yard. “It sounded like a helicopter crashing, or even a freight train coming through.”

Electrical outages on Wednesday had been substantially reduced from their peak levels, but there were still more than 71,000 customers without power, mostly in northern and central parts of the state, according to Poweroutage.us.

People were urged to avoid touching downed lines and to steer clear of roads that are at risk of flooding and mud. During the storm, at least 50 stranded motorists in Los Angeles were rescued from fast-moving swollen creeks, rivers, roads and storm channels, fire officials said.

Four of the nine people killed by the storm were hit by falling trees or limbs, according to Brian Ferguson, a spokesperson for the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services. Another died when power failed and she lost her oxygen supply, one drowned in the Tijuana River near the U.S.-Mexico border and three died in vehicle crashes, he said.

Atmospheric rivers also pummeled the state last year and caused at least 20 deaths.

This winter’s drenching does have a silver lining in that it helped boost the state’s often-strapped water supply. The water content of the vital Sierra Nevada snowpack jumped to 73% of average to date, up from 52% on Jan. 30, state Department of Water Resources data showed. The snowpack provides about 30% of California’s water when it melts.

At least 7 billion gallons (26.5 billion liters) of storm water in Los Angeles alone were captured for groundwater and local supplies, the mayor’s office said. Just two years ago, nearly all of California was gripped by a devastating drought that strained resources and forced water cutbacks.

As the latest weather front moved east, it prompted warnings across the state line in Arizona, where 12.4 inches (31 centimeters) of snow that fell at Flagstaff Pulliam Airport tied a record set in 1901.

___

Associated Press journalists Christopher Weber and John Antczak in Los Angeles, Julie Watson in San Diego, Walter Berry in Phoenix, and Scott Sonner in Reno, Nevada, contributed.

National News

FILE - The "House on Fire" ruins in Mule Canyon, which is part of Bears Ears National Monument, nea...

Associated Press

Biden adds to the nation’s list of national monuments during his term. There’s an appetite for more

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt did in 1906 what Congress was unwilling to do through legislation: He used his new authority under the Antiquities Act to designate Devils Tower in Wyoming as the first national monument. Then came Antiquities Act protections for the Petrified Forest in Arizona, Chaco Canyon and the Gila […]

2 hours ago

Front row from left, 2024 Kennedy Center Honorees Arturo Sandoval, Francis Ford Coppola, Bonnie Rai...

Associated Press

The stars will come out at the Kennedy Center for Coppola, the Grateful Dead, Raitt and Sandoval

WASHINGTON (AP) — Celebrities, cultural icons and a few surprise guests are gathering for the annual Kennedy Center Honors celebration Sunday evening in Washington. This year’s recipients of the lifetime achievement award for artistic accomplishment are director Francis Ford Coppola,the Grateful Dead, jazz trumpeter Bonnie Raitt. In addition, the venerable Harlem theater The Apollo, which […]

3 hours ago

Associated Press

Trump calls for ‘immediate’ cease-fire in Ukraine and says a US withdrawal from NATO is possible

WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump on Sunday called for an immediate cease-fire in Russia’s war with Ukraine and the president-elect renewed warnings that he was open to pulling the United States out of NATO. Trump made his cease-fire proposal after a weekend meeting in Paris with French and Ukrainian leaders, claiming in a social media […]

4 hours ago

Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump's nominee to be defense secretary, listens to reporters ...

Associated Press

Sen. Joni Ernst wants to hear from Hegseth on sex assault in the military and women in combat

SIMI VALLEY, Calif. (AP) — Republican Sen. Joni Ernst made her most expansive comments yet on Pete Hegseth, telling a largely GOP audience at a California security conference Saturday that she needs to hear more from President-elect Donald Trump’s embattled defense secretary pick on key issues before she decides whether to support him. ”I am […]

15 hours ago

Associated Press

Former West Virginia Attorney General Darrell McGraw dies at 88

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Darrell V. McGraw Jr., a former longtime West Virginia attorney general and state Supreme Court justice who fought back against the state’s drug overdose crisis, died Saturday. He was 88. Jared Hunt, a spokesman for the state Supreme Court, said in an email that McGraw died of a heart attack. The […]

16 hours ago

A New York City Police officer walks through brush and foliage in Central Park near 64th Street and...

Associated Press

Search for UnitedHealthcare CEO’s killer yields evidence, but few answers

NEW YORK (AP) — They have seen him smiling on a hostel security camera, but don’t know his name. They found the backpack he discarded while fleeing, but don’t know where he went. As the search for UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson’s killer goes on, investigators are reckoning with a tantalizing dichotomy: They have troves of […]

16 hours ago

Southern Californians recount harrowing mudslides during deadly record-breaking storm