SoCal storm: More than 8,000 San Bernardino County residents under evacuation orders amid fears of debris flows

Rob McMillan Image
Friday, January 29, 2021
SoCal storm: More than 8K San Bernardino County residents under evacuation
The evacuation orders affect residents of the communities of northeast Yucaipa, Mountain Home Village and Oak Glen.

OAK GLEN, Calif. (KABC) -- More than 8,000 San Bernardino County people were under evacuation orders on Thursday morning as a major winter storm made its way toward Southern California, prompting fears of debris flows in the El Dorado and Apple fire burn areas.



The orders affect residents of the communities of Oak Glen, northeast Yucaipa and Mountain Home Village.



A division chief with the San Bernardino County Fire Department, who lives in Oak Glen, said he was concerned that a drainage channel that runs underneath a bridge at Oak Glen Road will almost certainly overflow by Friday morning, flooding the roadway.



Homes situated alongside a nearby curve in the channel could be at risk. Another concern is that some hills in the area have no recorded burn history. Thus, the possible mudslides and debris flows there could be the worst in memory.



Storm timeline: Here's when heavy rain will hit Southern California


A massive storm is moving through California. Meteorologists look at how it impacted the Bay Area, what's happening now in the Central Valley and what's about to hit Southern California.

"Don't wait, do it now. It's not like a fire -- you can't see it growing," Yucaipa Fire Chief Grant Malinowski warned at a Thursday morning news conference. "That whole hillside can come down at one time. It's not incremental.



"If we ask you to leave your home, for your safety please leave your home."



Speaking at the same news conference, San Bernardino County sheriff's Lt. Julie Landon said the morning's calm conditions belied the danger posed by the incoming storm.



SoCal storm: Ski resorts in San Bernardino Mountains expecting tons of fresh snow


Justin Kanton, a spokesman for Big Bear Mountain Resort, spoke with ABC7's Brandi Hitt about the amount of snow that a powerful incoming storm is expected to bring to the San Bernardino Mountains.

"I know that you're looking out right now and you see the blue skies and you're not afraid," Landon said. "But tonight, when it hits -- between midnight and 2 o'clock in the morning -- you're not going to have time. It's going to be too late."



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