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New Year’s Eve storm floods streets, strands motorists, cancels horse races

The New Year of 2023 arrived in a deluge of rain that flooded streets throughout Southern California, stranding motorists, drenching celebrations and causing overnight havoc. And another heavier storm is expected later in the week.

The downpour contributed to a low turnout at Los Angeles’ big New Year’s Eve celebration at Grand Park in Downtown L.A. Organizers expected about 40,000 people to attend, but little more than 6,000 showed up.

The soaking also caused Santa Anita Park to cancel its New Year’s Day racing program on Sunday. But the horses were expected to be back on the track on Monday, and the popular Corgi dog race was delayed until February 19.

In Jurupa Valley, firefighters rescued a woman at 3:16 a.m. Sunday who was trapped on an island in the Santa Ana River bottom, surrounded by a 40-foot-wide river that had swelled to waist deep. Cal Fire/Riverside County Fire Department reached the woman in the river near West Market Street at Via Cerro and rescued her in an inflatable raft that was guided back to shore.

Firefighters said the woman refused medical treatment. No further information was available.

 

A red-tailed hawk shakes the rain from its feathers as it perches on a tree branch in Modjeska Canyon, located in in eastern Orange County, on Saturday afternoon, December 31, 2022. A series of winter storms have prompted flash flood evacuation warnings and wind advisories across Southern California that could dampen New Year’s Eve celebrations. The storm is expected to drop up to one inch of rainfall per hour, according to the National Weather Service. (Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)

Heavy rain continued to hit the Los Angeles area on Sunday Jan, 1, 2023. (Photo by OnScene.TV)

A family looks on through wind-blown rain during the.first of two New Year’s Eve fireworks shows on Saturday, Dec. 31, 2022, at Rainbow Harbor in Long Beach. (Photo by Howard Freshman, Contributing Photographer)

A couple embraces while watching New Year’s Eve fireworks on Saturday, Dec. 31, 2022, at Rainbow Harbor in Long Beach. (Photo by Howard Freshman, Contributing Photographer)

Trails from fireworks appear to fill the sky with stars during a New Year’s Eve show in the rain on Saturday, Dec. 31, 2022, at Rainbow Harbor in Long Beach. (Photo by Howard Freshman, Contributing Photographer)

Crowds were small due to steady rain and wind gusts during the.first of two New Year’s Eve fireworks shows on Saturday, Dec. 31, 2022, at Rainbow Harbor in Long Beach. (Photo by Howard Freshman, Contributing Photographer)

With dark clouds looming offshore, surfers make their way to the beach at Crystal Cove State Park in Newport Beach after and afternoon of surfing on a cool and cloudy Friday afternoon, December 30, 2022. (Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)

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In Tustin, the Orange County Fire Authority rescued five people from two vehicles on the flooded Fourth Street offramp from the Costa Mesa (55) Freeway at 11:53 p.m. Saturday. Authorities said one adult was sitting on top of a vehicle and four adults were sitting inside a second vehicle. No one was injured.

A downed tree almost fell onto a house in Beverly Hills and blocked Coldwater Canyon Drive, near Cielo Drive for several hours. Police said the tree fell at about 9:30 p.m. Saturday and was cleared from the roadway by 7 a.m. Sunday.

Also in Los Angeles, the Universal Studios Boulevard on-ramp to the southbound Hollywood (101) Freeway was closed due to flooding but reopened late Sunday morning, the California Highway Patrol reported.

Thick mud oozing onto the roadway forced the closure of State Route 138 between the Los Angeles-San Bernardino County Line (263rd St.) and State Route 18. Traffic was being diverted Sunday.

In West Covina, two people were pulled by emergency workers from a car that got stuck in three to four inches of water under Interstate 10 on Saturday.

The rains prompted a voluntary evacuation alert in Orange County on Saturday for the burn area in Silverado and Williams canyons. The alert was lifted at 7 a.m. Sunday.

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While the storm cleared for New Year’s Day, more strong rain is expected this week, according to David Sweet at the National Weather Service.

Two low-pressure fronts are heading toward Southern California, the later expected to bring extreme winds, heavy storms and flooding, Sweet said.

The first storm will likely bring light rain by Monday night or Tuesday. The second front arrives Wednesday night or Thursday, bringing two to four inches of rain to the lower areas and eight to ten inches in the mountains, Sweet said. That storm is forecast to generate winds of up to 50 mph.

(City News contributed to this report.)

 

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