California storm prompts concerns over mudslides


LOS ANGELES (AP) — Residents across California braced for possible flash floods and mudslides Tuesday as a Pacific storm began showering foothill areas devastated by wildfires.

Sandbagging and other preparations were being made in neighborhoods under threat, while heavy rains caused more than 260,000 power outages and dozens of voluntary evacuations in parts of central and Northern California.

Several inches of rain already had fallen in some mountainous areas in the north by Tuesday afternoon. But precipitation was still relatively light in the south, where flood watches were issued in fire-ravaged parts of Santa Barbara and Los Angeles counties as the storm was expected to strengthen by nightfall.

“It’s something we prepare for every year,” Los Angeles County fire Inspector Frederic Stowers said. “We know the fires go through and do a lot of damage. Within LA County, much of the slopes burned are going to be critical.”

People living around burn areas near the 250-square-mile Station Fire in Angeles National Forest were warned to brace for possible flows of mud, ash and debris with rainfall of up to 4 inches. Los Angeles County’s average rainfall for October is less than half an inch.

The storm was expected to drop 3 to 6 inches of rain in Santa Barbara County, where an 8,700-acre fire burned in May, before it moves on to the San Gabriel Mountains, where the U.S. Geological Survey recently warned of massive debris flows near the areas burned in September.

“It is obvious to me there are going to be some slides,” said Richard Payatt, 46, whose Santa Barbara home was evacuated during the fire in May. “It’s part of living in Santa Barbara with these beautiful hills. Occasionally you get fires, and then you get slides.”

Payatt said a local hardware store was sold out of tarps and sandbags because of the storm.

Flash-flood watches were issued for 11 counties up and down the state, said National Weather Service meteorologist Todd Morris.

The agency issued a flash-flood watch through today for the Santa Barbara burn areas. Between 1 and 2.4 inches of rain fell through Tuesday afternoon, Morris said. A flash- flood watch for the Los Angeles- area foothills was to take effect at 6 p.m. Tuesday.

Stowers said thousands of sandbags were distributed to fire stations throughout Los Angeles County, including more than 10,000 at a station near La Canada Flintridge.

Areas of concern in Los Angeles County include Tujunga, La Crescenta and La Canada Flintridge.

In Northern California, forecasters issued high wind warnings for the mountains, where gusts up to 60 mph were expected, and advisories for lower elevations, where gusts were expected to reach 50 mph.