SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. — A woman who authorities believe was living in her car was rescued after a snowplow inadvertently bumped into her vehicle, which was buried in snow.
South Lake Tahoe, California, city spokesman Chris Fiore highlighted the Feb. 17 incident in a Tuesday news release urging drivers to take safety precautions in winter weather. He said the city has had problems with illegally parked vehicles, which slows snow removal.
Fiore said the snowplow driver bumped into the back of the car, which popped the vehicle's trunk open. After that happened, workers from the plow truck started shoveling around the vehicle to prepare to tow it when the woman put her hand on the window from the inside.
"She wasn't trying to get out," he said Wednesday. "She wasn't making any noise."
The name of the woman was not released because police did not cite her for any violations, Fiore said. She declined medical attention and left and the vehicle was towed.
The woman said she'd been in the car for about five hours and seemed unconcerned about what could have happened had the snowplow not hit her vehicle, he said. The car's battery was dead and she couldn't roll down the windows.
"The truth is that this could have turned out very differently," he said.
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Another round of big-time storms will pass through Northern California starting Monday afternoon and into the week. Inches of rain and feet of snow could fall in some parts, and with that comes expected impacts to the highways and byways in the storms’ path.