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Mudslides and floods swamp LA as much-needed rains fall on fire zones

The weekend storm in Los Angeles helped to suppress the most harmful mountain fire in California, but it also closed the highway and school and closed emergency vehicles clogged in mud. It brought the landslide.

The first heavy rainfall for a few months absorbed the city of Los Angeles and the county, raining more than 1 inches in the burn zone and some of the Northern Hills around it.

However, the scorched ash of the area was washed away the hills, covered the road in the mud, and trapped a helpless driver, including emergency vehicles.

The truck is stuck on a road boldly covered by LA mud on a wildfire on Sunday. @Caltransdist7/X
NATIONAL WEATHER Service warns the possibility of “the flow of life -threatening fragments” near the fire belt. @Caltransdist7/X
A part of the 101 highways passing through downtown Los Angeles floods on Monday. @chpcentralla/x/fox weather
A fire engine is rescued from a mud near the Parisade Fire on Sunday. Sky Fox

At least one fire truck fighting the Parisade's fire had to be rescued from mud. video From the Fox weather show, and the emergency crew were forced Use a bulldozer Digs four vehicles trapped on the Woodland Hills expressway, just north of the fire.

Due to dangerous road conditions, Malibu's public schools were closed on Monday, and mud and debris closed some of the major arteries to cities, part of the five highways in northern Los Angeles.

The SUV is carried from the mud, one of the four vehicles packed on the Woodland Hills highway on Sunday. Fox 11 Los Angeles

The flood also closed some of the Malibu's Pacific coastal expressway and a part of the highway 101 uptown in Los Angeles. According to ABC 7.

The National Weather Service issued a wide range of flash food warnings near the burns area on the weekend, saying that “it is possible to flow life threatening.” The warning was released on Sunday night, but the flash food watch will be valid in this area until Monday afternoon.

In a better news, the firefighters were almost completely contained the Parisade and Eaton fire, and together nearly 40,000 acres. The authorities said that these fires continue to burn when they consume available fuel -mainly trees and planting on wooden hills -when rain rains to erase them. 。

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