Saturday.Ī helicopter lowered a rescuer to the woman, picked her up and took her to safety, where she was reunited with family, OCFA Capt. That dramatic rescue occurred at about 3:30 p.m. In Laguna Hills, Orange County Fire Authority workers saved a woman who was clinging to a tree above rising water at Aliso Creek near the 24400 block of Christina Court. Heavier precip will begin to move in overnight tonight and continue thru Mon afternoon, with lower snow levels (down to 5000 feet). There is a 10 to 20 percent chance of light snow accumulations on the Grapevine over Interstate 5 Monday night.”Īlright y'all, we've got one more storm to get through before we dry out for a bit! Spotty showers will continue today. “Gusty winds could bring down tree branches. “Travel could be very difficult,” according to the NWS. For Sunday night through Monday, snow could accumulate 5 to 10 inches above 5,500 feet, and 3 to 6 inches at higher points. Forecasters said as much as 3 inches of snow could fall below 7,000 feet, with 5 to 10 inches possible at higher elevations Saturday night. Tuesday for the Los Angeles County mountains. Day, and into Tuesday morning in Orange County and the Inland Empire.Ī winter weather advisory remains in effect until 3 a.m. That system will linger over the Los Angeles area into Monday’s national holiday for Martin Luther King Jr. Several new daily rainfall records were set yesterday including Downtown Los Angeles with 1.82 inches! This brings the season total (since Oct 1) to 11.91 inches, which is 6.46 inches above normal to date. In Orange County, Anaheim could see about an inch of rain from the latest storm and, heading to the Inland Empire, cities including Temecula and San Bernardino were expected to receive about an inch and a half, said NWS meteorologist Stefanie Sullivan. And 1.72 inches fell at Long Beach Airport, surpassing the 1.48 inches from 1978, according to the National Weather Service. At LAX, a record 1.53 inches fell Saturday, breaking the old record of 1.51 inches, also from 1978. RELATED: California storms photos: Floods, mudslides, rescues, sinkholesĭowntown Los Angeles received 1.82 inches of rain Saturday, breaking the old daily record of 1.56 inches set in 1978. Lower-elevation areas of Los Angeles County were expected to receive about three quarters of an inch of rain from Sunday night to Monday evening with one to two inches in the mountains, Gomberg said. The storm system made its way over the region Sunday afternoon with a light drizzle that was expected to increase in the evening, said National Weather Service meteorologist David Gomberg.
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