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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Crews rescued dozens in mud-bound Cathedral City
    Two people are placed in the front bucket of a large wheel dozer. Beside them are emergency personnel tending to a person on a stretcher
    Emergency crews used wheel dozers to evacuate older residents from a board-and-care home when conventional rescue vehicles were unable to navigate deep mud on the streets of Cathedral City outside of Palm Springs.

    Topline:

    Dozens of people were rescued from mud-bound streets in a town outside of Palm Springs that was inundated after Tropical Storm Hilary dumped record rain in the region.

    What happened? Mud flows as high as 6 feet during the peak of the storm left people stranded in cars and in their homes.

    How many were trapped? Crews made 46 rescues in about 24 hours in Cathedral City, about 6 miles outside of Palm Springs. About half the rescues were people who got caught in their vehicles when floodwaters rapidly rose in streets. The rest were people who got stuck in their homes by the high mud flows.

    Dramatic rescue: In one instance, crews were forced to use a massive wheel dozer to rescue 14 older residents from a mud-inundated board-and-care home. Conventional rescue vehicles couldn’t drive through the high mud.

    Go deeper: Palm Springs And Coachella Valley Work To Clean Up After Tropical Storm Hilary Brings Floods, Damage

    Dozens of people were rescued from mud-bound streets in a town outside of Palm Springs that was inundated after Tropical Storm Hilary dumped record rain in the region.

    Crews made 46 rescues in about 24 hours in Cathedral City, about 6 miles from Palm Springs, which saw mud flows at the peak of the storm as high as 6 feet, according to the city’s fire chief, Michael Contreras. The city of Palm Springs fire department and Riverside County fire and sheriff’s department also pitched in to help with the rescues and flooding impacts.

    A middle aged, balding, light-skinned man wearing a white t-shirt and mud-splatted white pants stands knee-deep in mud beside a car stuck in the mud.
    Mark Chambers of Cathedral City tries to dig his car out of knee-deep mud.
    (
    Erin Stone
    /
    LAist
    )

    Contreras said about half the rescues were people who got caught in their vehicles when floodwaters rapidly rose in streets. The rest were people who got stuck in their homes by the high mud flows.

    “Everybody did their part. They stayed committed. They stayed focused, and now we have 46 people that aren't in peril anymore,” he said.

    The aftermath of Tropical Storm Hilary continues to disrupt life in the desert, which experienced some of the most significant flooding in Southern California.

    In one of the most dramatic rescues in Cathedral City, crews used a massive wheel dozer to rescue 14 older residents from a mud-inundated board-and-care home.

    Conventional rescue vehicles couldn’t drive through the high mud, so the residents, most with mobility challenges, were carried from their flooded homes in the huge bucket of a dozer. One woman rescued had mud all over her legs and bare feet as she was lifted into a stretcher and ambulance to be brought to safety and a health check.

    There have been no fatalities reported, according to the fire department.

    “Over the last 36 hours, the men and women of Cathedral City, they rose to the occasion,” Contreras said.

  • Is it deadlier than usual?
    A skier goes down a slope overlooking a mountainous range covered in snow fill with trees in the distances and a couple buildings.
    A skier takes to the slopes at Mammoth Mountain resort in California's Sierra Nevada on Jan. 26, 2018.

    Topline:

    A deadly ski season in California raises urgent questions. Why doesn’t the state track resort injuries or deaths, and who’s protecting people on the slopes?

    The backstory: It’s been a deadly winter on California’s slopes, but the state has no idea how bad it really is. In February alone, a 21-year-old skier was found dead on a black diamond at Northstar California. Witnesses reported another skier trailed blood down a Mammoth Mountain run. A fatal collision at Northstar followed yet another death within less than two weeks — and that’s before a catastrophic avalanche killed nine backcountry skiers near Lake Tahoe.

    Why it matters: Without these statistics, ski safety experts, personal injury lawyers and snow scientists couldn’t tell CalMatters whether it’s been a particularly dangerous year. Whether weather, climate change, terrain or visitor counts are increasing or decreasing risk. Skiers and snowboarders can’t determine for themselves the relative safety of the slopes they’re paying to visit.

    Read on... for more about why we don't know how deadly this ski season is compared to past ones.

    It’s been a deadly winter on California’s slopes, but the state has no idea how bad it really is.

    In February alone, a 21-year-old skier was found dead on a black diamond at Northstar California. Witnesses reported another skier trailed blood down a Mammoth Mountain run. A fatal collision at Northstar followed yet another death within less than two weeks — and that's before a catastrophic avalanche killed nine backcountry skiers near Lake Tahoe.

    “There’s been no indication that there are more injuries this year than previous years — just more media coverage around serious ones,” said John Rice, president of Ski California, an industry association for ski areas in California and Nevada.

    He may be right. The problem is that right now, nobody can tell.

    California does not monitor ski injuries or deaths at resorts. It does not have a threshold for injuries on the slopes that triggers investigations or intervention. And legislative efforts to require ski accident reporting have met failure after failure.

    CalMatters contacted more than two dozen ski resorts listed by Ski California or the U.S. Forest Service as operating in the state. Not one responded with accident, injury or fatality data.

    CalMatters also filed a public records request to the U.S. Forest Service seeking five years of incident reports from at least 24 resorts the agency said operate on land it manages. A public records specialist said that a response could take at least six months to process, in part because resorts must first review the records to flag anything they consider proprietary.

    Without these statistics, ski safety experts, personal injury lawyers and snow scientists couldn't tell CalMatters whether it's been a particularly dangerous year. Whether weather, climate change, terrain or visitor counts are increasing or decreasing risk. Skiers and snowboarders can't determine for themselves the relative safety of the slopes they're paying to visit.

    The California Department of Public Health calls injury data “the foundation for action.”

    An unclear bargain

    Twenty years ago, Dan Gregorie flew from South Carolina, where he was living at the time, to California, where he’d planned to ski with his 24-year-old daughter Jessica. As he stepped off the plane, he learned she’d had an accident.

    Carrying her snowboard across a steep traverse from one lift to another slope at Alpine Meadows ski resort near Lake Tahoe, Jessica slipped and slid down an icy slope — plummeting off a cliff, with no fences or guardrails to stop her. Her boyfriend later told Gregorie she slid backwards on her belly, looking up at him, the whole time.

    Jessica Gregorie was an animal lover who’d started her own dog care business in San Francisco. An athlete who’d biked across the country from Maine to the tip of Washington state to raise money for a women’s shelter. She was her parents’ only child.

    First, Dan and his wife Margaret lost Jessica. Then, they lost the lawsuit Gregorie had hoped would stop future accidents. The waiver she’d signed dealt a major blow to their case. The gist of the ruling: Jessica had accepted the risks.

    Gregorie disagreed. Without transparency about accident rates on the slopes, how could anyone truly know what bargain they were making?

    “They have a moral obligation to fully inform people as to what the risks are that they're taking,” Gregorie said. “Most people that go skiing on a weekend expect to come home at the end.”

    Gregorie, a now-retired physician who spent his career in health care management, was shocked by the lack of detailed safety information.

    He founded the SnowSport Safety Foundation in 2008. Personally hiring a lobbyist, he spent over a decade pushing for legislation in California to require that ski resorts make their safety plans and accident statistics public. He also lobbied in Colorado and Maine.

    “Most of it came out of my pocket. But at that point, I’d lost my daughter, and my wife,” said Gregorie. Margaret Gregorie died after a battle with ovarian cancer, two years after Jessica’s accident. “I was more than willing to spend it.”

    His goal, he said, wasn’t more regulation; it was more transparency.

    It almost worked.

    Unknown accidents

    Ski resorts in California operate under a patchwork of oversight that leaves accidents on the slopes largely opaque.

    California’s workplace safety agency, Cal/OSHA, oversees ski lifts via its Amusement Ride and Tramway Unit and requires incident reports for any injuries requiring more than first aid.

    The slopes are another matter.

    The ski resorts operating with permits on national forest system land are required to notify the U.S. Forest Service “as soon as practicable” after fatal incidents, catastrophic injuries, search and rescue operations, problems with ski lifts and anything with the potential for serious harm, such as avalanches.

    If it’s serious enough, the agency may conduct its own review.

    But these accident reports are difficult to access and slow to obtain. And not all resorts operate in national forests — Northstar California Resort, for example, is largely on private land.

    In court, resorts are further shielded. Ravn Whitington, lead litigation partner at Porter Simon Sierra Injury Lawyers, said that waivers and decades of court decisions have established that skiing and snowboarding come with inherent risks.

    But case law, he says, hasn’t caught up to the changing conditions of the sports — something he notices when he skis with his young daughter. “People are flying by, going through slow zones, skiing out of control,” he said. “I'm skiing with a 10 foot gap between my daughter and myself, and we have people shooting that gap.”

    Ski safety expert Larry Heywood, who worked for the ski industry for decades and now serves as an expert witness in lawsuits, sees resorts differently.

    “They’re conscientious, and they don’t want people to get hurt,” Heywood said. “It’s not good for the business. All that press just in the last week or so with these Heavenly and Northstar deaths — there’s people who decide not to go skiing because of that, right?”

    ‘Unnecessary burden’

    Gregorie’s lobbying efforts paid off in 2010: California lawmakers passed a bill authored by then-Assemblymember Dave Jones requiring ski resorts to prepare publicly available safety plans and establish their own policies around signage and barriers for certain collision hazards.

    It also called for releasing monthly reports upon request of any skiing, snowboarding or sledding fatalities — including the cause and the location of the accident, the age of the person involved, and where medical care was provided.

    Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who broke his femur in a skiing accident the same year Jessica Gregorie died, vetoed it — saying the requirements duplicated those of the U.S. Forest Service and wouldn’t necessarily increase safety.

    He said at the time that the bill “may place an unnecessary burden on resorts.” Last winter the ski and snowboard industry in California and Nevada added $1.8 billion to state GDP and $100 million to state and local tax revenue, according to Ski California.

    The next year, Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed an almost identical measure, calling it “yet another exercise of the State's regulatory power for objectives that, in the ordinary course, are handled by private business or the people themselves.”

    Another two-year effort to mandate that ski resorts must regularly send monthly accident reports for both serious injuries and deaths to the California Department of Public Health died in the Legislature. It never even made it to Brown’s desk.

    Ski California says it has opposed legislation to increase reporting. “That legislation attempted to force untenable requirements on ski areas and didn’t find support from the industry, local legislators, or California Governors,” said Jess Weaver, spokesperson for the industry group.

    Weaver blamed California’s legislative efforts on “a single individual who lacked knowledge about how ski areas operate,” and said that the industry’s present position is unchanged.

    Gov. Brown declined to comment via a spokesperson, and a representative for Schwarzenegger did not respond to CalMatters' inquiry.

    Jones, who later served as the state’s insurance commissioner, called the vetoes unfortunate.

    “It’s disappointing that 16 years have gone by, and it continues to be the case that safety plans and reporting of fatalities or injuries is not required,” Jones said. “I don’t think sticking our head into the sand makes the risk or problem go away.”

    ‘Situational awareness’

    Gregorie doesn’t know if his daughter Jessica would have checked Alpine Meadows’ safety statistics, had they been public.

    “She was a 24-year-old woman, a young woman at that point in time. I'm not sure she would have definitively looked at it,” Gregorie said. “But I'm absolutely sure that parents who are taking their families skiing, particularly going skiing for the first time, would be doing that.”

    He and other supporters of transparency aren’t necessarily arguing that, with more information, individual skiers would change their behavior. They're arguing that information can shape industries and drive competition around safety.

    “Making the information public would allow consumer advocacy organizations to see what’s going on and to suggest appropriate changes, even if individuals themselves don’t change their behavior,” Jones said.

    Ski California’s Weaver said that numbers without context could easily be misinterpreted. So many factors are involved in accidents, from equipment to individual behavior.

    “Ski areas operate in very different environments — with varying terrain, weather conditions, visitation levels, and skier ability — so raw totals don’t accurately reflect safety performance,” Weaver said. “Furthermore, confidentiality and privacy laws prohibit us from disclosing details of any injuries reported or handled by ski patrol or other resort employees.”

    The industry does collect nationwide totals. Last winter, 63 people suffered catastrophic injuries such as broken necks or backs at ski resorts, and 50 people died, according to the National Ski Areas Association’s report.

    Analyses of a comprehensive state injury database by Gregorie and, later, the Los Angeles Times two years ago, suggests that the industry statistics miss thousands of serious accidents requiring emergency room visits or hospitalization.

    Scientists agree that the absence of information is a problem. Without more detailed data, it’s nearly impossible to study how safety risks may change on crowded slopes or as the climate warms.

    “The data is probably the biggest linchpin in really being able to say anything about it,” said Benjamin Hatchett, an earth systems scientist at Colorado State University.

    An avid skier who grew up skiing around Tahoe – where he had his own share of accidents – Hatchett said such data wouldn’t deter him from one resort or another.

    “You’re going to ski at the places that have the terrain, and the snow, and the ski culture and the experience that you’re looking for,” said Hatchett. But knowing where and when more injuries are occurring would fine-tune his decisionmaking. “It might change my situational awareness.”

    Twenty years after his daughter’s death, Gregorie has given up on legislation. His SnowSport Safety Foundation is no longer active.

    But Gregorie says he hasn’t given up the fight for transparency.

    “When I talk people tell me they're going skiing, I say to them, ‘Do you know this? Do you know what you're going into?’”

    This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.

  • Sponsored message
  • DOJ publishes some missing files related to Trump
    A white man stands with another man, both partially obscured by black bars and layered over a 'Page not found' error screen from the U.S. Department of Justice website
    An NPR investigation finds the Justice Department has removed or withheld Epstein files related to sexual abuse accusations that mention President Trump.

    Topline:

    The Justice Department has published additional Epstein files related to allegations that President Donald Trump sexually abused a minor after an NPR investigation found dozens of pages were withheld.

    About the additional files: They include 16 new pages that cover three additional FBI interview summaries with a woman who accused Trump of sexual abuse decades ago when she was a minor. Also included are two pages of an intake form documenting the initial call to the FBI from a friend who relayed the claims.

    Why it matters: NPR's investigation previously found 53 pages that appeared to be missing from the public database. Now that these documents are published, there are still 37 pages of records missing from the public database, including notes from the interviews, a law enforcement report and license records.

    Read on... for more about these new pages and to read them.

    The Justice Department has published additional Epstein files related to allegations that President Donald Trump sexually abused a minor after an NPR investigation found dozens of pages were withheld.

    They include 16 new pages that cover three additional FBI interview summaries with a woman who accused Trump of sexual abuse decades ago when she was a minor. Also included are two pages of an intake form documenting the initial call to the FBI from a friend who relayed the claims.

    NPR's investigation previously found 53 pages that appeared to be missing from the public database.

    Now that these documents are published, there are still 37 pages of records missing from the public database, including notes from the interviews, a law enforcement report and license records.

    The Justice Department has repeatedly told NPR that any documents withheld were "privileged, are duplicates or relate to an ongoing federal investigation."


    Last week, after NPR's initial story, the Justice Department said it was determining if records had been mistakenly tagged as duplicates and if any were found, "the Department will of course publish it, consistent with the law."

    More detail, but less context

    The interview documents are part of more than 1,000 new pages published to the Epstein files public database Thursday that also include what appears to be the complete case file from the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell initiated in 2006.

    The new documents go into more detail about the allegations made against both Trump and Epstein when the woman was between 13 to 15 years old.

    An FBI email summarizing the claims and a Justice Department PowerPoint slide deck note the woman claimed that around 1983, when she was around 13 years old, Epstein introduced her to Trump, "who subsequently forced her head down to his exposed penis which she subsequently bit. In response, Trump punched her in the head and kicked her out."

    In the newly-published documents, the woman's described how Trump allegedly put her head "down to his penis" and she "bit the s*** out of it." She alleged that Trump struck her and said something to the effect of "get this little b**** the hell out of here."

    During the final interview the woman had with the FBI in 2019, when asked whether she "felt comfortable detailing her contacts with Trump," she reportedly asked "what the point would be of providing the information at this point in her life when there was a strong possibility nothing could be done about it."

    The new files do not shed any more light on how credible federal investigators viewed her claims or how they were resolved. Still unanswered, too, is why the allegations were included in a Justice Department slide presentation last year summarizing the cases against Epstein and his accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.

    Trump has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing related to Epstein. The White House and Justice Department have warned that the raw files released to the public include "untrue and sensationalist claims."

    White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement to NPR Friday that Trump has been "totally exonerated by the release of the Epstein files."

    "These are completely baseless accusations, backed by zero credible evidence, from a sadly disturbed woman who has an extensive criminal history," Leavitt wrote. "The total baselessness of these accusations is also supported by the obvious fact that Joe Biden's department of justice knew about them for four years and did nothing with them — because they knew President Trump did absolutely nothing wrong. As we have said countless times, President Trump has been totally exonerated by the release of the Epstein Files."

    The White House also noted a Justice Department statement posted Thursday on X that said there were 15 documents it discovered were "incorrectly coded as duplicative" and there were five prosecution memos that the Southern District of Florida determined could be published while protecting privileged materials.

    Democrats and Republicans on the House Oversight Committee have demanded answers from the Justice Department regarding the missing files and the department's handling of the release of Epstein documents. This week, the committee voted to subpoena Attorney General Pam Bondi to answer questions about the files.

    This is a developing story and will be updated.

    Have information to share about the Epstein files? Reach out to Stephen Fowler through encrypted communications on Signal at stphnfwlr.25. Please use a nonwork device.
    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • Homegoing celebration for the civil rights leader

    Topline:

    The Rev. Jesse Jackson's loved ones will celebrate his life in Chicago on Friday, as his family hosts a memorial service that's open to the public, but will also be attended by dignitaries and celebrities.

    About the service: Former presidents Barack Obama, Joe Biden and Bill Clinton are scheduled to speak at the service at the House of Hope, a megachurch on Chicago's South Side. Former Vice President Kamala Harris will also speak. The service will also feature performances by Chicago native Jennifer Hudson, along with gospel singers Bebe Winans and Pastor Marvin Winans.

    Watch live: The event is slated to begin at noon ET and is expected to run for several hours. Read on to watch streaming video of the service here, along with live coverage from WBEZ in Chicago.

    For live updates of Rev. Jesse Jackson's service, head to WBEZ and the Chicago Sun Times' live blog.


    The Rev. Jesse Jackson's loved ones will celebrate his life in Chicago on Friday, as his family hosts a memorial homegoing service that's open to the public, but will also be attended by dignitaries and celebrities.

    Former Presidents Barack Obama, Joe Biden and Bill Clinton are scheduled to speak at the service at the House of Hope, a megachurch on Chicago's South Side. Former Vice President Kamala Harris will also speak.

    The service will also feature performances by Chicago native Jennifer Hudson, along with gospel singers Bebe Winans and Pastor Marvin Winans.

    The event is slated to begin at noon ET and is expected to run for several hours. You can watch streaming video of the service here, along with live coverage from WBEZ in Chicago.

    Other speakers include Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, along with the Rev. Al Sharpton and former NBA star Isiah Thomas.

    The service — and another, private service on Saturday — will be officiated by faith leaders Pastor Charles Jenkins and Rev. James T. Meeks.

    Program for Friday's memorial

    Below is the order of service, as planned:
     
    Musical Prelude: Legacy Mass Choir 
     
    Call to Order: Officiants Rev. James T. Meeks, pastor emeritus of Salem Baptist Church of Chicago, and Pastor Charles Jenkins, pastor emeritus of Fellowship Missionary Baptist Church of Chicago
     
    Scripture: Matthias Jackson, Old Testament; Atticus Jackson, New Testament
     
    Acknowledgements & Resolutions
     
    Prayers: Rev. Michael I. Pfleger, pastor emeritus of Faith Community of St. Sabina (Chicago); Rabbi Sharon Brous, founder of IKAR (Los Angeles); Rev. Otis Moss III, Trinity United Church of Christ (Chicago)
     
    Musical Selection: Hezekiah Walker, "Every Praise"
     
    Expressions: Rabbi Steven Jacobs, Progressive Faith Foundation; Pastor Steve Munsey, Family Christian Center; Judge Greg Mathis
     
    Opening: Yusef Jackson; Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker; Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson
     
    Musical Selection: Opal Staples
     
    Expressions: James Reynolds, Jr., chairman and CEO, Loop Capital; C.K. Hoffler, board chair, Rainbow PUSH Coalition; Thomas S. Ricketts, chairman, Chicago Cubs; Isiah Thomas, NBA Hall of Famer; former President Barack Obama
     
    Musical Selection: Jennifer Hudson, "A Change Gonna Come"
     
    Expressions: Rev. Al Sharpton, founder, National Action Network; James Zogby, founder, Arab American Institute; Gustavo Francisco Petro Urrego, president of the Republic of Colombia; former President Bill Clinton

    Video Tribute: Amadou Janaeh (Gambia); Andre Ramirez (former POW)

    Musical Selection: Le'Andria Johnson, "We Shall Overcome"

    Family Expression: Former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr.

    Expressions: John Nichols; Rep. Chuy Garcia (IL-04); Rep. Maxine Waters (CA-35); Pastor Jamal Bryant, New Birth Missionary Baptist Church (Stonecrest, Ga.)
     
    Musical Selection: Marvin Sapp, "Never Would Have Made It"

    Expressions: Former Vice President Kamala Harris; former President Joe Biden

    Musical Selection: Bebe Winans, "Stand"

    Family Expressions: Jacqueline Jackson; Ashley Jackson

    Musical selection: Santita Jackson, "To God Be The Glory"

    Family Expression: Rep. Jonathan L. Jackson (IL-01)

    Musical Selection: Marvin Winans, "Let the Church Say Amen"

    Benediction: Charles Jenkins

    Recessional

    Civil rights leader fought segregation in his home state

    Jackson died on Feb. 17 at age 84. His death has brought an outpouring of tributes to the civil rights leader and politician who devoted his life to pushing for equality and change. His early efforts to fight segregation included insisting on access to the "white library" in his hometown of Greenville, S.C., in 1960.

    Dorris Wright, a former classmate of Jackson's who was one of the "Greenville Eight" along with him, told Here & Now that after their action, "the library was shut down, I think, for about a week or ten days. And then when they reopened, they reopened it to everybody."

    Five years later, Jackson marched alongside Martin Luther King Jr. and others in Selma, Ala. His advocacy continued in the decades that followed, leading Jackson to run for president in 1984 and 1988.

    The Chicago ceremonies bookend a week that began with Jackson's body lying in state at the South Carolina Capitol on Monday. There, he was honored in events that drew luminaries such as Rep. Jim Clyburn, former U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young, and University of South Carolina women's basketball coach Dawn Staley.

    Last week, Jackson's body lay in repose at the headquarters of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, the Chicago-based civil rights organization he founded. His body will return to the group's headquarters on Saturday, for a celebration that will be private, but streamed online.

    Jackson will be laid to rest in Chicago's venerable Oak Woods Cemetery. There, as WBEZ reports, Jackson will join civil rights icons such as journalist Ida B. Wells-Barnett, who died in 1931, and Olympian Jesse Owens, who died in 1980.
    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • Highs in the mid to upper 70s
    The fronds on palm trees blow sideways in high winds
    Temperatures will also warm up this weekend.

    QUICK FACTS

    • Today’s weather: Windy and sunny
    • Beaches: Upper 60s to mid-70s
    • Mountains: Mid-60s
    • Inland:  67 to 73 degrees
    • Warnings and advisories: Wind advisories in effect until Saturday afternoon.

    What to expect: Santa Ana winds are here and it's going to become slightly warmer this weekend.

    Read on ... for more details.

    QUICK FACTS

    • Today’s weather: Windy and sunny
    • Beaches: Upper 60s to mid-70s
    • Mountains: Mid-60s
    • Inland:  67 to 73 degrees
    • Warnings and advisories:  Wind advisories in effect until Saturday afternoon.

    Don't forget to moisturize because the Santa Ana winds are here for the weekend.

    Today we're looking at highs in the upper 60s to mid-70s for the beaches, valleys and the Inland Empire. Meanwhile in Coachella Valley, expect temperatures to reach 74 to 78 degrees.

    Wind advisories are in effect for most of the valleys and mountains, including the Malibu Coast where gusts could reach up to 45 mph.

    Looking ahead, it's going to warm up this weekend with highs from the coasts to the valleys potentially reaching the mid-80s.