Inquirer News

California cleans up as storm hits Southwest

California Storm

The cab of a jackknifed tractor-trailer hangs over the eastbound section of Freeway 91 at its intersection with Freeway 55 in Anaheim Hills, Calif. on Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2014 after it collided into the guardrail according to the California Highway Patrol. Slick road conditions from heavy rains may have played a role in the accident that occurred around 3 p.m., CHP Officer John Latosquin said. AP

Debris and rocks fill the backyards of homes along San Como Lane in Camarillo Springs, Calif., after a storm on Friday, Dec. 12, 2014. Mountainsides stripped bare by a wildfire last year belched a damaging debris flow into the Southern California community during a downpour from a major Pacific storm early Friday. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu)

Debris and rocks fill the backyards of homes along San Como Lane in Camarillo Springs, Calif., after a storm on Friday, Dec. 12, 2014. Mountainsides stripped bare by a wildfire last year belched a damaging debris flow into the Southern California community during a downpour from a major Pacific storm early Friday. AP

CAMARILLO, California — Californians are cleaning up Saturday from a major storm that soaked the drought-stricken state before moving east to drop rain on Arizona.

Perhaps the biggest job was in Camarillo, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) northwest of Los Angeles, where a mudslide made 13 homes uninhabitable Friday. The debris flowed down a hillside burned by wildfire last year.

A rare tornado that briefly touched down in South Los Angeles triggered cleanup efforts.

In Northern California, residents of two trailer parks in Redwood City were bailing floodwaters, while Sonoma County residents were relieved the Russian River didn’t overflow its banks.

More rain is forecast in California starting Sunday in the north and Monday in the south, though the weather isn’t expected to equal the strength of the storm swirling farther east Saturday.

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