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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Storm’s final hit triggers slides

Homeowners, road crews left with muddy mess

Raquel Maria Dillon Associated Press

LAGUNA BEACH, Calif. – Axl Dominguez awoke early Wednesday to a bumping sound and looked out the window to a scary sight: plastic trash cans floating down the flooded street.

And then the water came rushing into his house.

“We didn’t have time to get anything … Water started coming in from all the walls. Then the wall fell and we got out through the window,” the 15-year-old Dominguez said hours later, shivering in shorts, a mud-splashed sweatshirt and bare feet as he carried his pajama-clad little brother to the truck of a neighbor who finally took them to an evacuation center.

The tail end of a storm that dumped rain on Southern California for nearly a week gave the region one final lashing, burying houses and cars in mud, washing hillsides onto highways, flooding urban streets, threatening dozens of canyon homes and spreading filthy water that prompted the closure of 12 miles of Orange County beaches.

Inflatable boats and canoes were used to rescue dozens of motorists and homeowners from flooded streets, hotels and hillsides. Others refused to leave their homes.

The storm weakened as it moved eastward, but floods still washed away at least six vacant homes in Arizona and inundated parts of Nevada and Utah.

The storm turned the final days before Christmas into a nightmare, and left some residents fearful that more and bigger mudslides could strike the wildfire-scarred hillsides in suburban Los Angeles even after the skies cleared.

Few choose to evacuate

More than 200 homes were evacuated for at least 24 hours in La Canada Flintridge and La Crescenta, suburbs of Los Angeles below steep hillsides that burned in 2009 and where mudslides inundated homes and backyards in February.

Few residents heeded the evacuation orders, which were lifted Wednesday evening as the driving rain eased.

It’s the same area where the Station Fire charred 250 square miles above suburbs tucked below the San Gabriel Mountains.

“The ground is so saturated it could move at any time” and the threat will remain for several weeks, said Bob Spencer, spokesman for the Los Angeles County Department of Public Works.

A low, dull roar

In Silverado Canyon, in the Santa Ana Mountains in eastern Orange County, Mary Adams and her husband got up in the middle of the night to check for mudslide danger as rains pounded the hill above them.

They had just crawled back into bed at 3:30 a.m. when they heard a low, dull roar and then the echoing boom of boulders tumbling into a creek.

Adams, 54, jumped from bed to see a small river of mud, rocks and debris sweep past her side door, whisking the couple’s travel trailer 100 feet down the hill and filling their garage and succulent garden with thick ooze.

Like Adams, dozens of her neighbors had refused to evacuate and worked with shovels to clear debris from storm drains and divert rivers of water and muck from their homes and cars.

Hotel rescue

In San Diego, the first floor of the Premier Inn in the city’s Mission Valley flooded, forcing about 50 guests and employees to the second floor where lifeguards used a rubber raft to rescue them amid floating trash bins and fast-moving water, fire officials said.

Two other large hotels nearby were also evacuated when they lost electricity and the parking lots flooded.

SeaWorld San Diego closed for the day as water rose in the nearby San Diego River.

Homes ruined

Sixty people were rescued and more than 30 homes evacuated when water surged through Dove Canyon, a gated community in Orange County, said Orange County Fire Capt. Greg McKeown.

Officials tagged five homes in Rancho Santa Margarita as uninhabitable.

Swamped by mud

In Highland, about 65 miles east of Los Angeles, two creeks overflowed, swamping as many as 20 homes in up to 3 feet of mud. Nearly 250 homes have been evacuated.

“This mud flow moved cars, picked them up, stood them up on their nose at 45-degree angles, buried them,” said Bill Peters, a spokesman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

Swift-water rescue teams reported dozens of rescues within the past couple of days.