Updated November 30th, 2018 at 11:27 IST

Rain Causes Concern For California's Wildfire-Burned Areas

A storm that moved through Northern California largely missed wildfire-burned areas on Thursday, November 29 but crews remained ready to respond as more rain reached communities devastated by a recent wildfire, officials said

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A storm that moved through Northern California largely missed wildfire-burned areas on Thursday, November 29 but crews remained ready to respond as more rain reached communities devastated by a recent wildfire, officials said.

Emergency response teams were monitoring rain-saturated areas in the town of Paradise and nearby communities in the Sierra Nevada foothills in case of trouble in flood-prone spots said Butte County spokeswoman Kelly Hubbard.

"They are ready to respond to any concerns and watching and waiting because of the rain event that is coming through," Hubbard said.

The crews quickly cleared a tree that toppled in the town of Magalia, but no other reports of damage had been received from about an inch of rain dumped by a storm that hit overnight in the burn zone about 225 kilometers northeast of San Francisco, she said.

The town of 27,000 has been under mandatory evacuation orders for nearly three weeks since a wildfire swept through, destroying thousands of homes and killing at least 88 people. Residents could begin returning early next week, but only if the storm doesn't hinder efforts to clear roads and restore power, said Sheriff Kory Honea.

READ: Haunting Pictures Of Pets And Wild Animals Affected By The California Wildfires

No major problems were reported in burn zones in Southern California early on Thursday, November 29, but numerous traffic accidents occurred on slick Los Angeles-area freeways and most vehicles traveling in the mountains were ordered to put chains on their tires.

The National Weather Service issued a watch for possible flash flooding and debris flows from areas scarred by major fires throughout the state. On the coast near Big Sur, the California Department of Transportation closed a 19-kilometer stretch of Highway 1 because of potential instability.

The scenic route perched between towering mountainsides and the ocean has been dogged by slides since 2016. But the one that hit in May 2017 was monumental, requiring extensive work to rebuild the highway.

In Southern California, residents were urged to voluntarily evacuate a string of neighborhoods about 70 kilometers southeast of Los Angeles along with a flank of the Santa Ana Mountains where a fire burned thousands of acres last summer. 

Mandatory evacuations were ordered for a small section of the city of Lake Elsinore beneath a burn zone.

READ: Cher, P!nk, Kardashian Family And More React To The Horrific California Wildfire

West of Los Angeles, rain fell heavily at times in vast areas burned by fires this month and last December an area where there are strong memories of a January downpour that unleashed devastating debris flows through the community of Montecito that killed 21 people and left two missing.

(All pictures from Associated Press)

In the zone that burned this month, the city of Malibu warned of rocks falling on canyon roads and Pepperdine University closed its campus.

Sandbags were offered in numerous locations in Los Angeles and Ventura counties. The city of Malibu urged residents to look for their locations in an interactive online map created by the US Geological Survey that depicts the likelihood of debris flows given certain amounts of rainfall.

The weather service also issued a backcountry avalanche warning for most of the central Sierra, including the Lake Tahoe area. The warning went into effect Thursday morning and runs through 7 am on Friday, November 30.

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Published November 30th, 2018 at 11:26 IST