Flooding vulnerabilities of L.A. River's Glendale Narrows spark concern amid record rain (2024)

Heavy rain this week turned the Los Angeles River flood-control channel into a raging torrent, and with new storms expected on Monday, emergency officials are keeping a wary eye on a well-known stretch that has long been vulnerable to flooding.

Glendale Narrows is a lush seven-mile section of rumbling runoff between Griffith Park and downtown that attracts numerous sightseers and bicyclists. But despite its Instagram appeal, the narrows is a flood manager’s nightmare.

It remains one of the few areas along the World War II-era channel that has a soft bottom due to its high water table. As a result, it is prone to erosion and buildups of sediment, vegetation and debris that could back up flows dumped by major storms.

Advertisem*nt

It is also the only major segment of the 51-mile-long L.A. River flood-control system that was not designed to contain a 100-year flood, or a major deluge that has a 1% chance of occurring in any given year.

To make matters worse, this stretch of river is frequently crowded with weeds and trees.

“Glendale Narrows is a choke point that we watch closely,” said Mark Pestrella, director and chief engineer of the Los Angeles County Flood Control District. “The big problem is that it is under the control of Army Corps [of Engineers}, which is not adequately funded to clean out the area on a regular basis.”

Although it is “armored” with flood barriers installed by the Army Corps to protect surrounding neighborhoods, industrial areas and freeways, major downpours still spark concern among county flood managers.

January storms leave L.A. County flood-control dams at risk of overflowing

Flood-control dams above the communities of Arcadia, Sierra Madre, Pacoima, Sun Valley and Sunland face risk of overflowing, officials say.

Jan. 24, 2023

County officials have proposed taking ownership of 40 miles of flood-control channels still operated by the federal government. By doing so, they hope to expedite maintenance and improvements as climate change increases the frequency of extreme weather.

Such a transfer of authority, however, would require congressional approval. “That could happen very soon,” Pestrella said, “or not for years and years.”

The Army Corps of Engineers has helped reduce the flood risk by removing about 45,000 cubic yards of sediment from the Glendale Narrows area over the last five years, federal officials say.

California

Dramatic drone photos show where land gave way under cliffside residences in San Clemente

The Orange County Fire Authority evacuated three apartment buildings Wednesday morning due to a slide in the 1500 block of Buena Vista.

March 16, 2023

In the meantime, Pestrella said, his agency routinely compensates for hydraulic deficiencies in the area by “restraining flows” of stormwater released from the county’s Big Tujunga and Pacoima dams perched in the southern flanks of the San Gabriel Mountains.

Frequent catastrophic floods prompted civic leaders in the 1930s to transform the L.A. River into a complex flood-control channel and levee system to protect the burgeoning flatlands.

Advertisem*nt

But new research suggests that the system’s channels and levees were based on 20th century assumptions that did not take into account recent “whiplashing shifts” in extreme weather caused by global warming.

In the last decade alone, California has been hit with back-to-back cycles of historic drought followed by historic rain, snow and flooding.

“I’m personally concerned about this because our levee systems are very, very old and basically made out of soil,” said Amir AghaKouchak, a UC Irvine professor. AghaKouchak co-authored a 2020 study on the impacts of climate change on levees protecting critical infrastructure–transmission lines, roads, railroads, natural gas and petroleum pipelines in densely populated areas such as Southern California’s coastal communities.

“The impacts of increasingly extreme drought ending with extreme rainfall is something that engineers who designed L.A. County’s flood-control systems 80 years ago never considered,” he said.

California risk shifts from drought to floods after record rain, snow

Though recent storms have cut California’s drought by half, record snowpack will increase the threat of spring flooding, forecasters say.

March 17, 2023

The Department of Public Works is completing a report requested by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors on the viability of existing flood-control infrastructure, as well as plans for reducing flood risks and making disadvantaged communities more resilient.

The report was prompted by a recent study led by UC Irvine researchers showing how weather extremes due to climate change may affect the region, whose development was guided by social and racial divisions that favored white residents.

Communities at highest risk include Carson, Compton, Bell Gardens, South Gate, North Long Beach and portions of downtown Long Beach, including the southern end of Pine Street near the Long Beach Convention Center.

A victim of geography and explosive growth, 20-mile-long Compton Creek has for centuries drained a 42-square-mile watershed. By the 1920s, however, residents were pleading for protection from floods that inundated businesses.

Today, the upper stretch of the creek is a concrete-lined flood-control channel that cuts through Compton, carrying water to the Los Angeles River and the Pacific Ocean at Long Beach Harbor.

The creek’s dirt-bottom section winds through some of the most densely populated and highly industrialized regions in Southern California.

Forecasts of new storms to come have focused attention on the condition of earthen embankments guarding a segment of Compton Creek near the 91 Freeway, as well as a stretch of the L.A. River farther south in Long Beach.

In 2017, the Army Corps conducted an inspection that noted several “major deficiencies” at each of those 75-year-old levee systems, which are under the control of Los Angeles County.

Advertisem*nt

At the Compton segment, it found trees with trunks larger than 2 inches in diameter, depressions on the levee crown measuring up to 8 inches deep, an unpermitted 15-inch petroleum pipeline penetrating the top of the riverward slope, and, it said, “vines completely covering the majority of the flood wall preventing inspection.”

Problems at the Los Angeles River segment included erosion gullies up to 30 inches deep, several 16-inch-diameter pressurized gas pipelines penetrating the toe of the riverward slope, and an unpermitted 12-inch-diameter steel pipe on the levee crown.

Army Corps levee safety officers rated the systems to be “minimally acceptable” after determining that the deficiencies would not prevent them from performing as intended during the next significant runoff event.

As snow records fall along the eastern Sierra Nevada, fears loom over impending snowmelt

As record snows saddle the eastern Sierra Nevada, snowmelt threatens to inundate Los Angeles Department of Water and Power infrastructure.

March 11, 2023

The county, however, has still not submitted documentation showing that the deficiencies have been corrected, which are required in order for it to be eligible to receive federal funding toward the cost of repairs, Army Corps officials said.

“We have not been provided with documentation stating that the deficiencies have been corrected,” said Dena O’Dell, spokeswoman for the Army Corps, “but that is not to say that the county has not performed the work.”

The next periodic inspection of the levees will be conducted sometime next year, federal officials said.

Advertisem*nt

Among the Army Corps’ top priorities in Southern California is spending roughly $600 million to upgrade 64-year-old Whittier Narrows Dam, built in a natural gap in the hills about 11 miles east of Los Angeles to impound water from the San Gabriel River and Rio Hondo.

The three-mile-long earthen dam was placed in the agency’s highest-risk category when it determined that several potential failure scenarios threatened more than 1 million people downstream, from Pico Rivera to Long Beach.

Work on improvements designed to make the dam more resilient to future storms is expected to begin in 2025 and take four years to complete, officials said.

In the meantime, a coalition led by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and local flood risk managers is gearing up to launch an unprecedented year-long public service crusade to raise awareness of flood risks across the Los Angeles River’s 824-square-mile watershed.

Coming soon will be multimedia alerts and televised announcements popping up across the region, targeting an audience that hadn’t given the threat much thought before.

“Pretty soon,” Pestrella said, “you’ll be seeing people including me on television recommending that we invest in community awareness programs, promote flood insurance, and retrofit structures where appropriate.”

Advertisem*nt

“But right now, the most important message of all is this one: Whether it’s rain or shine, do not go in the river,” he said. “It is not safe.”

More to Read

  • L.A. County captures 96 billion gallons of water during ‘super year’ of storms

    May 11, 2024

  • New storm moves through L.A. region, bringing flood, mudslide risks

    Feb. 21, 2024

  • New California storm triggers flash flood warning for western L.A. County

    Feb. 19, 2024

Flooding vulnerabilities of L.A. River's Glendale Narrows spark concern amid record rain (2024)

FAQs

Is Glendale CA flooding risk? ›

Glendale Flooding Risk

The city of Glendale has moderate risk from flooding. There are 8,176 properties in Glendale at risk of flooding over the next 30 years. This represents 22.9% of all properties in Glendale. Find the flood risk for a specific property.

What was the worst flood in Los Angeles history? ›

The flood of 1938 is considered a 50-year flood. It caused $78 million of damage ($1.69 billion in 2023 dollars), making it one of the costliest natural disasters in Los Angeles' history.

Could the LA River overflow? ›

The LA River has a long history of flooding, even before extensive settlement. When it rains, large amounts of water flow out of the mountains into the flat areas where present day cities are located. Historically this water spread out in large areas that would sometimes be miles wide.

What is the biggest recorded flood in California? ›

The Great Flood of 1862 was the largest recorded flood in the history of California, Nevada, and Oregon.

What areas in California are at the highest risk of a flood? ›

Neighborhoods in San Mateo, Sacramento and Orange counties stand out as areas in California with large percentages of homes with major flood risk. A substantial number of Sacramento neighborhoods have more than 80% of properties at high risk of flooding.

How high above sea level is Glendale California? ›

Why does California flushed 95% rainwater to the ocean? ›

The backstory: The intense flushing of water from the Delta to the Bay – rather than by pumping to Central Valley farms, storage facilities, and southern California communities – is driven by a 2019 legal document known as an “Incidental Take Permit.”

How deep is the LA River in the middle? ›

The Los Angeles River cross section in the downstream portions is trapezoidal. The bottom width is 200-400 feet, top width is 400-600 feet and the depth is 20-35 feet.

What is the biggest river to the north of California that has surplus water? ›

The Largest River in California

According to the Water Education Foundation, the Sacramento River provides 31 percent of the state's surface water runoff. The Sacramento collects water from the Klamath Mountains, the Cascade Range, the Coast Range and the western slopes of the northern Sierra Nevada.

When was the last time California was underwater? ›

64 Scientific American, drowned: A 43-day atmospheric-river storm in 1861 turned California's Central Valley region into an inland sea, simulated here on a current-day map. the Pacific Ocean began to pound central California on Christmas Eve in 1861 and continued virtually unabated for 43 days.

Why is California flooding so much? ›

Climate models show that flood risk is growing as atmospheric rivers—the storms that cause most large floods—become more intense. Risk is also increasing due to sea level rise and slope-destabilizing wildfires.

What is the 1000 year flood in California? ›

The 1000-year-old storm that rocked sunny California

One of the most remarkable and catastrophic storms in California's history occurred in the winter of 1861–1862, when a series of powerful atmospheric rivers brought torrential rain and snow to the state for over 40 days.

Is it safe to live in Glendale CA? ›

However, compared to other communities of similar population size, Glendale has a crime rate that is noticeably lower than the average. This means that for comparably sized cities all across America, Glendale is actually safer than most according to NeighborhoodScout's exclusive analysis of FBI crime data.

Where does Glendale CA get its water? ›

The City purchases between 60% and 70% of its potable water from the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California and between 30% and 40% of its water is from local groundwater wells. Each source of water is highly treated to stringent state and federal water quality standards.

Is the tap water in Glendale CA Safe? ›

Glendale Water & Power customers know they can count on excellent water quality and water reliability. Each year, GWP sends a water quality report to every customer in the city. Consistently, these reports show that Glendale water meets and, in many instances, surpasses all federal and state drinking water standards.

What areas are most at risk for flooding? ›

Flood zones are geographic areas which have been designated by FEMA for having a high risk of floods. Most flood zones are land that is near bodies of water such as rivers, lakes, ponds, streams, or oceans, or in areas that get a large amount of rainfall each year.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Mrs. Angelic Larkin

Last Updated:

Views: 6238

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (67 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Mrs. Angelic Larkin

Birthday: 1992-06-28

Address: Apt. 413 8275 Mueller Overpass, South Magnolia, IA 99527-6023

Phone: +6824704719725

Job: District Real-Estate Facilitator

Hobby: Letterboxing, Vacation, Poi, Homebrewing, Mountain biking, Slacklining, Cabaret

Introduction: My name is Mrs. Angelic Larkin, I am a cute, charming, funny, determined, inexpensive, joyous, cheerful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.