Homecoming After Laguna Landslide
Hundreds Allowed To Return Home After Tony Community Evacuated
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Play CBS Video Video Beautiful, Dangerous SoCal A landslide wreaked havoc on Laguna Beach Wednesday. But, Bill Whitaker reports, tragic encounters with Mother Nature are frequent in some of Southern California's loveliest locations.
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Video Living With Landslides In the wake of the Laguna Beach landslide, Sandra Hughes visits La Conchita, Calif., where a deadly mudslide killed ten people earlier this year.
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Video Escaped 'Slide In Nick Of Time Lori Herek's home was one of at least 17 wiped out by landslides in Laguna Beach, Calif. She and her future son-in-law Ryan Haskell told The Early Show about their experience.
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Damaged homes are shown across Bluebird Canyon after a landslide in Laguna Beach, Calif. (AP Photo/L.A.Times, Mark Boster)
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A house and vehicle damaged by a landslide are visible from a nearby hilltop. (AP)
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A landslide victim is treated for minor injuries after being evacuated from her home in Laguna Beach, Calif., Wednesday. (AP)
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Photo Essay Landslide: First Looks Laguna Beach residents return to damaged homes.
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Photo Essay California Storms Storms pound the West Coast, causing deadly landslides, floods and tornados.
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Interactive California Burning Photos from the deadly 2003 wildfires, a look at the victims and a history of the state's worst fires and other disasters.
Though 48 homes remained at least temporarily off-limits, people were allowed back to about 310 undamaged homes as crews worked to restore gas and phone service to the area, City Manager Ken Frank said. Electricity was back on in most homes Thursday.
City officials said seven homes were destroyed and 15 suffered significant damage.
Twenty-two of the affected homes were considered uninhabitable because of damage or their proximity to the slide; access was limited to 26 because of damage or their proximity to the slide.
Assistant City Manager John Pietig said damage estimates had changed since the slide — and could shift again in coming days.
"Some of you, you've got your houses down the hill," Frank told more than 250 people who packed a meeting at City Hall. "You're not going to get in now. You're not going to get in this month."
More than 24 hours after the disaster, frayed nerves were clearly in evidence.
Residents in Laguna Beach will keep close watch over their footing on the hills of Bluebird Canyon, reports CBS News Correspondent Bill Whitaker. They fear it's not a matter of if, but when more of the hill will slide again.
Laguna Beach has been dry since a trace of rainfall nearly a month ago, but before that, Southern California had its second-rainiest season on record. The region has gotten nearly 28 inches of rain since last July, more than double the annual average.
"We don't have any clothes except the ones we have on our backs," said 65-year-old retiree Ruth Castro. "There's things that have to be done at home."
Castro owns two homes in the affected area, and had been monitoring them from a nearby hillside using binoculars. She will be barred from entering one; the other was unaffected.
Laguna Beach knows disaster well. The landslide yesterday was a tragic repeat of one 27 years ago...the same canyon, the same community in ruins. Kay Teel lost her house in the first slide, but has since rebuilt. The home was evacuated in this week's slide.
"Why do people live there? Well, I guess it's just the magic of the place," Teel told Whitaker. "From my living room you can look one way and see the Pacific Ocean; the other way I look and see Bluebird Canyon. It just makes my heart sing."
Carrie Lange, 44, said she had used foot trails to sneak past police barricades back to her 1934 cottage, which wasn't damaged. But Lonnie Duka, a 54-year-old photography professor who retrieved medicine at his house Thursday, noticed a nearby driveway had shifted 150 feet.
"The vista out of the house is so shocking: a vast landscape changed. You have this beautiful canyon view, and now there's a driveway in it," said Duka, who had lived in the home for 22 years.
Five people suffered minor injuries in the slide.
The cause of the disaster was under investigation. But geologists said it was almost certainly related to the winter storms that drenched Southern California. Laguna Beach got nearly double its usual yearly rainfall.
The slide occurred about a mile from the beach on steep sandstone hills that have been densely covered with large two- and three-story homes, many worth $2 million or more.
Officials said residents likely wouldn't be able to recoup their major losses. Insurers have been eliminating coverage for landslides in recent years, though some still offer it. Poulton Associates Inc. said a policy covering a $1 million home would cost about $3,500 a year.
"Right now we have a moratorium on Laguna Beach," said Josh Feinauer, an administrator for the Salt Lake City-based insurer.
©MMV CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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