Remaining cars cleared from Highway 58 after massive mud flow
Highway 58 east of Tehachapi remained closed Monday as crews worked to clear mud and standing water after heavy rain in the Antelope Valley triggered a massive mudslide.
The last of some 200 cars that were abandoned on the highway Thursday afternoon were cleared about 1:30 a.m. Monday, said Caltrans spokeswoman Florene Trainor.
About 20 miles of the highway between State Routes 14 and 202 are closed to traffic, though only a fraction of that is damaged, Trainor said.
One big rig and about half a dozen cars were removed from the mud and debris covering a long stretch of the highway from Exit 165 to Cameron Canyon Road, Trainor said. Loaders and excavators are digging up the dirt covering the highway and carting it away to two different sites, she said.
Caltrans tweeted a picture of a string of cars that had remained through the weekend. Crews were working Monday to drain standing water and remove the mud, Trainor said.
Roads around Lake Elizabeth that were closed due to the storm Thursday have since reopened, officials said.
A California Highway Patrol official said it could take until Thursday to reopened Highway 58.
Nearly 200 vehicles, including about three dozen tractor-trailers, were trapped by mudflows that reached five and six feet high in the huge rainstorm. No fatalities were reported.
The storm was called a 1,000-year event by meteorologists, and geologists have surveyed the surrounding mountains to make sure the soil on those slopes is stable.
Staff writer Amina Khan contributed to this report.
For breaking California news, follow @JosephSerna
ALSO
The last Love Ride heads into the sunset
California’s end-of-life law: Who should pay for the right to die?
Brown linked climate change to California’s wildfires. Scientists disagree.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.