Wicked Storm Blasts Southern Calif.

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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Jan 25, 2008, 11:06:54 AM1/25/08
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*Perilous Times and Global Warming

Wicked Storm Blasts Southern Calif.*


Friday January 25, 2008 2:16 PM

POINT MUGU Calif. (AP) - A powerful winter storm that unleashed a thick
blanket of mountain snow, heavy rain and at least one tornado pounded
Southern California for a fifth straight day Friday.

Some areas Thursday received more rain than they did the entire year
before, National Weather Service meteorologist Jamie Meier said, though
experts said the moisture would do little to improve local water supplies.

By Friday morning, Long Beach had received 2.43 inches of rain, compared
to 2.1 over the previous 12 months, Meier said. Downtown Los Angeles had
received 2.25 inches and Santa Barbara was drenched with 5.4 inches.

Higher up, Mountain High ski resort received 18 inches of snow, but was
forced to close its slopes Thursday due to high winds. The resort said
on its Web site it would reopen Friday.

The National Weather Service issued a winter storm warning for the Santa
Barbara County mountains through 10 p.m. Friday. The snow level was
expected to drop to between 2,000 and 3,000 feet Thursday night, and
down to 1,500 feet during heavier showers or thunderstorms.

A flash flood warning was in effect early Friday in Los Angeles in areas
that were denuded by last year's wildfires.

At least one waterspout from the Pacific made landfall Thursday night,
the National Weather Service said. The tornado tore the roof off of a
building at Naval Base Ventura County in Point Mugu, meteorologist Curt
Kaplan said.

Vance Vasquez, a base spokesman, said debris was scattered across the
runway and ``a good portion'' of the roof was torn from Hangar 351,
which houses aircraft. There were no immediate reports of injuries.

The storm had forced the closure of Interstate 5 late Wednesday on each
side of the Grapevine section of Tejon Pass, which soars to an elevation
of more than 4,000 feet between the Los Angeles Basin and the San
Joaquin Valley. Hundreds of trucks and cars were stuck along a 40-mile
stretch of the major north-south artery but most had been guided out by
Thursday morning, the California Highway Patrol said.

A roughly 40-mile stretch of the icy interstate remained closed Thursday
evening and more snow was expected in the area early Friday. There was
no estimate as to when it would reopen.

In Orange County, crews placed safety barriers against several homes in
fire-scarred Modjeska Canyon Thursday.

``The rain resulted in a few minor debris flows behind a few houses but
as far as I know there was no structural damage,'' Capt. Mike Blawn of
the Orange County Fire Authority said.

Authorities are concerned about another storm forecast to hit the area
over the weekend. Forecasters are predicting 4-6 inches to hit south and
southwest facing mountain slopes between Saturday night and Sunday morning.

Heavy rain and hail prompted the Santa Anita horse track in Arcadia to
cancel races Thursday, the fourth time this month. Its synthetic track
has had drainage problems.

The storm was not expected to improve local water supplies. One of the
driest rain seasons on record left reservoirs so low last year that
several cities called for voluntary water conservation.

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