Malibu Surfside News - News Alert

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Double Fatality Puts Malibu’s Kanan Dume Road in the Spotlight—Again

• Authorities Are Stymied by Drivers Who Do Not Use Arrestor Bed to Stop Runaway Vehicles

BY ANNE SOBLE


A fiery collision involving a gravel-filled double trailer truck and two automobiles at the intersection of Pacific Coast Highway and Kanan Dume Road claimed the lives of two men—including Malibu resident William Weissberg—and resulted in serious injuries for Dave Wise, a veteran county firefighter.

Flames from the crash could have ignited office complexes adjacent to the bluff where the runaway truck exploded about 10 a.m. last Wednesday, just as wildfire-weary Malibuites were getting the smoke and ashes out of their systems.

The driver of the big rig was identified by authorities as Hovik Oganes Papikyan, 34, of Glendale.

County Sheriff’s Traffic Sgt. Philip Brooks said Papikyan was traveling illegally on Kanan Dume, which is closed to vehicles over 8000 pounds with more than two axles.

The sheriff’s department spokesperson said a preliminary review of accident data indicates the truck driver was traveling about 70 mph when he may have experienced brake failure on the road’s steep grade. He ran the red light at the PCH intersection, crashing first into the Mercedes driven by Weissberg, then into Wise’s Mercury SUV.

After it hurled over the two vehicles, the truck smashed into the embankment, shifting the gravel load forward, as well as sending it flying into the air, and killing the driver, according to Brooks.

A question repeatedly asked at the accident scene was why Papikyan did not use the 800-foot runaway vehicle arrestor bed. The emergency lane was installed in 1987 following a rash of similar truck accidents, including two in a three-week span that claimed three lives. At that time, there was a community outcry that the intersection was a safety hazard.

The arrestor bed, which is 16 feet wide and 2.5 feet deep (filled with gravel and sand), is bounded by a side concrete railing and terminates with a phalanx of 72 barrels—each filled with 1400 pounds of sand—that serve as impact-reducing devices.

There are 21 signs alerting drivers to the road’s steep grade, the need to check brakes, and the presence of the runaway vehicle lane, which has averted well over a dozen crashes.

One factor expected to be addressed in the accident report is that the last, largest warning sign was knocked down during the weekend before the accident by the nearly 100-mph winds that fueled the wildfire that started Sunday, Oct. 21. That sign was not put back up until after the accident.

Another issue expected to be raised is the concern voiced by Brooks that truck drivers were violating the truck ban rather than taking the longer detours through Camarillo-Oxnard or Santa Monica that were mandated by the closure of Malibu Canyon Road due to the wildfire. Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and the California Highway Patrol personnel were taxed by the fire, and there was no way to step up law enforcement on the one canyon route that remained open.

William Weissberg, 58, the Malibuite who was killed in the crash, was not identified until this Monday. Weissberg was a Century City attorney who was married and lived in the Malibu Knolls area, one of the neighborhoods hardest hit by last week’s Canyon Fire. A colleague said Services for Weissberg were reportedly slated for this week at Mt. Sinai Memorial Park.

The east Malibu resident’s car was totally incinerated by the intensity of the fire at the crash scene. His name was withheld for five days because of the additional time required for identification and notification of next of kin.

At the wheel of the second struck vehicle, a white SUV, was a 25-year county firefighter, Dave Wise, who suffered a smashed foot that may require surgery, broken ribs, extensive bruising and possible head trauma.

Wise, 45, was pulled from his burning car by Ocle Martinez, who works in property management at the Point Dume Professional Center above the embankment that the truck drove into, and sheriff’s deputies who were among the first to respond to the scene.

The veteran firefighter, who has been released from the hospital and is recuperating at his home in West Hills, described the crash to the Malibu Surfside News: “I remember a sound of heavy metal, sparks, flying metal and debris, then I passed out...when I came to, there was fire all around me...my clothes were soaked with diesel fuel.”

He said that he still can’t believe that he “survived the [flames and fumes]. I am so grateful...” His wife, Penny, said simply that “he has a guardian angel...if the truck had hit the car an inch or two in either direction, Dave would be dead.”

Wise paused, then softly explained that when he was assigned to local Fire Station 99 two years ago, his was the second unit to respond when an overloaded double rig of roof tiles barreled through the same intersection. The light was green and the intersection was empty at the time.

The driver of that truck was killed but a passenger in the cab survived.

An intensive investigation of last Wednesday’s accident is expected to take several weeks or more, according to Brooks. In addition to questions about signage placement, investigators will try to determine the truck’s condition, what kind of training the driver had and whether he was directed to use Kanan.

The LASD spokesperson said it is possible that “damage to the truck is so intensive that the investigation may yield few, if any, clues.”

Brooks said the possibility that Papikyan panicked or froze at the wheel is not being ruled out.

A family member told Brooks that the driver spoke and read English. It is surmised that he knew he was on the road illegally and saw the signs about the runaway vehicle lane.

Why he ignored the arrestor bed and tried to turn onto Pacific Coast Highway, causing the truck to go into a centrifugal skid, may never be known.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Malibu Fire: Day Two

Malibu: The Canyon Fire: Day Two

HEADLINE UPDATE

Fire is burning across the northern edge of La Costa, where 225
houses burned in 1993. Structure protection there. No losses yet.
Fire now at 2400 acres. 10 percent containment.
Flames seen atop Saddle Peak, just south of the communications towers.
Fire is moving east at low speed.
Destroyed: 5 houses, the church and the glass and mirror business.
Damaged: 9 houses, 5 businesses.
Kanan Dume Road is open, contrary to radio reports.
Voluntary evacuations now called for Sunset Mesa.
$1.2 million in firefighting costs so far.
One firefighter injured-heat exhaustion-yesterday.
Fire is burning up west side of Rambla Pacifico.
One garage (with a Prius in it) burned on the west side of Rambla
Pacifico between Hume and Las Flores Canyon Road (Camp 8).
Fire has crossed Rambla Pacifico in several places, but is burning
into the wind, very slowly in most cases.
County Fire Chief Michael Freeman says Malibu did not get more than its fair
share of resources, despite anger from Santa Clarita residents that
engines were shifted here that could have been kept in reserve there.
PCH is likely to be closed at least through tomorrow, making school openings
unlikely.
The big worry for Monday night: winds will shift and blow from the
northeast and east, possibly causing fire to spread west into Puerco
and Latigo canyons.
City is promising to remove blown-over trees on
Guernsey and other Malibu Park streets today.
Governor came to Malibu at 11 a.m. for a briefing and photo op.
—Hans Laetz

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Malibu Fire

MALIBU: The Canyon Fire: Oct. 21, 2007

SUNDAY NIGHT HEADLINE UPDATE


No one hurt or killed.
Five houses burned.
1200 acres burned by 7 p.m.


Two commercial structures lost: the Malibu Presbyterian Church and the Malibu Glass and Mirror business on Winter Canyon Road.


Webster Elementary School was singed—storage and garden facilities on the northern edge were lost, but the school was saved.


Our Lady of Malibu Catholic Church and School scorched but no serious damage.
Ralph’s Supermarket not damaged— freezers and coolers not affected. But the store is open to firefighters and police only.


CVS Pharmacy not damaged but closed.


Businesses in Malibu Colony Shopping Center not seriously damaged, but numerous spot fires broke out in landscaping and building facades, and on roofs. Some trees in the parking lot blew over before the fire crews arrived.


Malibu Schools will be closed Monday.


Malibu High School evacuation center is open but unused.


PCH closed to all but Malibu residents westbound at Topanga Canyon.

PCH hard closed eastbound at Kanan Dume, but some people are getting through.

Kanan Dume Road open and unimpeded.

Malibu Canyon Road open to utility crews only.

No fire at or near Monte Nido.

The fire lines on Saddle Peak also held.

There are virtually no fire lines to the west or toward Puerco Canyon. There are no fire lines to the east either.

Spot fires are still being put out near Malibu City Hall, Winter Canyon, and Hughes Labs.

Evacuations are reportedly in progress in Topanga Canyon’s southern neighborhoods.

Most vacant land in the Civic Center area burned. Most structures did not.
The County Fire Department will not release the addresses of burned structures. It is believed that two burned on Malibu Road, two burned on Malibu Crest—one of them the Malibu Castle (Castle Kashan). One house may have burned in the Malibu Creek area, but that is not confirmed.

Malibu Tow emerged unburned, except for six crashed vehicles in the impound yard.

Adamson House not touched. Baywatch boats wet the Malibu Pier down.

One thousand hot meals and two thousand sack lunches were distributed tonight.

Crews are being told no relief is on the way, and to grab naps in their trucks if possible. Ten other major incidents in Southern California mean no more resources will be sent to Malibu tonight.

Sheriff’s deputies are guarding two banks and the Malibu Castle “in case anyone gets any ideas,” a sheriff’s commander says.



The Canyon Fire: Sunday Night Update

By Hans Laetz


For Malibu residents, the 2007 Canyon Fire was a familiar crisis, but different. The fire caught Malibu residents largely at home, before dawn on a weekend; meaning roads were open and clear from the beginning.

That meant fire trucks had an open set of roadways as they streamed into Malibu Sunday morning.

The day began for many residents at about 1 a.m., when the predicted Santa Ana winds arrived. Those who ventured outside smelled smoke—but it was from a fire 40 miles north, near Castaic.

Winds at Point Mugu were clocked above 50 miles per hour as the night went on, and eventually reached 108 miles per hour at one mountaintop station in Ventura County.

The fire was sparked at 4:50 a.m. Sunday, when a power pole on Malibu Canyon Road dropped its 14,000-volt lines just northwest of the old Sheriff’s Honor Rancho turnoff. Crews from the first truck to arrive singled out the failed power line as the source of the fire, but an official investigation will follow.

By 7 a.m., fire had spread in two prongs: east down the side of Malibu Canyon as far as the northern edge of Serra Estates, and west over two ridge-tops toward Pepperdine University and Hughes Research Labs.

At 7:20, a firefighter warned this reporter that the power lines he was standing under, watching the fire in Malibu Canyon just north of HRL, were liable to topple. They did, about a half hour later.

At 8:40, the western prong of the fire had topped the ridge above Pepperdine, and was burning down the eastern fringe of the campus. Another tongue of fast-moving fire funneled down a steep arroyo, across Malibu Canyon Road and into Winter Canyon.

That fire quickly engulfed Malibu Presbyterian Church, which was fully in flames less than five minutes after the first flames began licking at it.

A few minutes later, the northern edge of Webster Elementary School was aflame. Fire trucks streaming up Winter Canyon concentrated on the school, the adjacent Our Lady of Malibu Catholic Church, and the major electrical substation and switching yard in the canyon.

At 9, the landscaping at Malibu Colony Shopping Center was ablaze.
By midday, the fire had stopped spreading to the east. Serra Retreat was smoldering, but few structures were burned. All of the underbrush north of the one-lane bridge was burned, right up to structures. Los Angeles City firefighters were working with shovels to save houses near the Retreat.

At 2 p.m., the fire had burned to the east behind Serra Estates and over Sweetwater Mesa. Fire trucks saved the office buildings, stores and apartments on the north side of Pacific Coast Highway as the fire edged east behind McDonald’s and PC Greens.

To the north, the fire was raging unchecked through the rugged canyons and backcountry. The eastward spread put the 40 or so houses on the dead-end loop of Carbon Mesa in the fire’s target.

Heavy use of fire helicopters, and slackening winds, put the fire out on its southern march towards the signal at Carbon Canyon Road. North of the mesa, the fire went up a canyon to the northeast, then reversed itself and came up a ridge.

Homes there were saved by firefighters who lit backfires, robbing the fire of its fuel.

By 6 p.m. there were scant pockets of smoke rising from the fire area. Winds were slack as well. But the winds were kicking up again, as they often do right at sunset.

At 6:15 p.m., helicopters had to return to the fire’s origin point, near the Malibu Canyon tunnel. The resurgent wind had whipped embers into a wall of flame in the bramble of brush just above the old Rindge Dam.

Once again, the potential for disaster had shifted to the west.

The fire boss—at 7 p.m.—warns: “Our original contingency was that this fire would burn to the west all the way to Ventura County. Think about all the people and houses there.

“The winds instead blew it to the east today. If they change tonight, it could be just that bad.

Firefighters were told tonight there are 10 major fires in Southern California and no more resources are coming to Malibu.
Malibu Fire Photo Log - Click Here

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

PCH Closure

PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY LANE CLOSURE BETWEEN
WINDING WAY AND RAMIREZ MESA DRIVE

The California Department of Transportation announces that one northbound lane of Pacific Coast Highway between Winding Way and Ramirez Mesa will be closed on Wednesday, Oct. 24, between the hours of
9 a.m. and 2 p.m. for utility work. Caltrans has issued an encroachment permit for this work.

Caltrans advises motorists to “Slow For The Cone Zone.”

####

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

MALIBU ROAD ALERTS

PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY LANE CLOSURE BETWEEN
WINDING WAY AND ESCONDIDO BEACH ROAD
The California Department of Transportation announced that one southbound lane of Pacific Coast Highway between Winding Way and Escondido Beach Road will be closed on Friday, Oct. 12 and Monday, Oct. 15 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. for utility work.

PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY LANE CLOSURE BETWEEN
SWEETWATER CANYON ROAD AND SERRA ROAD
Caltrans also announced that one northbound lane of Pacific Coast Highway between Sweetwater Canyon Road and Serra Road will be closed on Tuesday, Oct. 16 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. for utility work.

Caltrans advises motorists to ”Slow for the Cone Zone.”

####

Thursday, October 4, 2007

PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY TRAFFIC ALERT

The California Department of Transportation advises motorists that the Annual Arthritis Foundation California Coast Classic Fun Ride will take place on Saturday, Oct. 6, on SR-101 and SR-1 from Ventura to Santa Monica. A large number of bicyclists will participate. Bicyclists will utilize the bike lane along SR-101 and SR-1 in Ventura County. As the Fun Ride enters Los Angeles County, motorists and bicyclists will share the road. Caltrans asks motorists to drive with caution along the route.


###

PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY ALERT FOR SATURDAY, OCT. 6

The California Department of Transportation advises Malibu motorists that the Annual Arthritis Foundation California Coast Classic Fun Ride will take place on Saturday, Oct. 6, on Pacific Coast Highway from Ventura to Santa Monica. A large number of bicyclists will participate. Cyclists will utilize the bike lane along PCH for this event. Caltrans asks motorists to be cautious while traveling along this stretch of highway.


Caltrans advises motorists to “Slow For The Cone Zone.”

####

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

NEWS ALERT

LNG PROJECT HEARING
Check the Malibu Surfside News
e-edition blog Thursday at
www.malibusurfsidenews.com
for a report on this week’s scoping
session on the NorthernStar
Clearwater Port LNG
project proposed for a
retired oil rig in the waters
northwest of Malibu.