California's 'endless onslaught' of severe weather forces thousands to flee their homes and leaves 1 dead

Becky1951

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Thousands of Californians fled their homes as severe weather continued to batter the state, leaving one dead, a child missing and massive swaths of power outages on Tuesday.

Moderate to heavy rains were expected to continue to hammer much of California on Tuesday as a fresh low-pressure system barreled toward the state as part of a "parade of cyclones" that prompted a string of rescues Monday.

Homes were flooded, streets transformed into rivers and cars were swamped amid the deluge.
One person was killed in Avila Beach, roughly 180 miles north of Los Angeles, when a vehicle was overtaken by water, said Anita Konopa, an official with the San Luis Obispo County Office of Emergency Services.
A child is also missing after being swept away when floodwaters swamped a vehicle in the northern section of the county, near Paso Robles, according to Scott Jalbert, another official with the agency.
A search for the child was called off Monday afternoon due to extreme conditions, said Tony Coppola, a spokesman for the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff’s Office.

While the rain let up a bit by Tuesday morning, mud and other dangerous conditions prevented rescuers from looking again as of 9 a.m. PT, Sgt. Ron Slaughter said.
"The child is still missing," Slaughter told NBC News. "There are discussions about how soon the search can resume due to conditions out there."
As of 9 a.m. PT on Tuesday, more than 216,000 utility customers were without power across California, according to PowerOutage.us. At least 14,000 of those were in Sacramento County alone, according to the outage tracker.



An 'endless onslaught'

Just as one episode of heavy rains across the state began to wind down, another low-pressure system rapidly gained strength off the West Coast, barreling toward the state, according to the National Weather Service.

"The endless onslaught of potent systems with atmospheric rivers of moisture continue to inundate California," it said.

Moderate to heavy rains were expected across much of California through Tuesday and into the night, while several more feet of snow were expected to accumulate along the Sierra Nevada, it said. The heavy rains are expected to worsen the ongoing flooding and prolong the risk of flash flooding and mudslides across the state.

Officials issued immediate evacuation orders Monday for the entire community of Montecito, which is home to a number of celebrities including Prince Harry and his wife, Meghan, as well as for parts of Santa Barbara and other nearby towns amid heightened flood and mudslide hazards.

In Montecito, the order was issued “based on the continuing high rate of rainfall with no indication that that is going to change before nightfall,” Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown said Monday afternoon.

Heavy rainfall in the area, which is home to 10,000 people, had already flooded roads and creeks, he said.

The flooding came five years to the day after heavy rains hammered a Montecito “burn scar,” killing nearly two dozen people.

The severe weather also forced the Santa Barbara Airport to close due to flooding, the airport announced in a tweet Monday.

"All commercial flights are canceled until further notice, and the terminal is closed," it said. The airport said its reopening would be "dependent on the weather and conditions."

In Chatsworth, a suburban neighborhood in Los Angeles, four people were trapped after two cars were swallowed by a sinkhole that left an entire road “compromised” Monday night, the Los Angeles Fire Department said.

Two people were able to get themselves out of the sinkhole, while firefighters were able to safely extricate the other two, who were treated and taken to a hospital with minor injuries, it said.

Maria Aldana, a 26-year-old who lives in the northern Los Angeles County community of Lancaster, couldn't believe her eyes when she saw sidewalks in her suburb swallowed up by rain waters on Monday night.

Aldana was grateful to be in driving her dad's truck and that she wasn't in her normal Toyota Corolla.

"When we were passing by, we were like, 'Dang if we would have come in my car, this would have been a lot worse,' " she said. "A 2023 Tacoma is very high."

California has faced deadly severe weather for days, with at least six people having died since New Year’s weekend, including a toddler who was killed after a redwood tree fell, crushing a mobile home in the state's north.

Two people killed in what appeared to be storm-related deaths in Sacramento County over the weekend were identified by the county’s coroner’s office Monday.

Both Rebekah Rohde, 40, and Steven Sorensen, 61, were found inside tents at separate homeless encampments, with a tree branch having fallen on both tents, the coroner’s office said. The cause of death for both was still pending examination.

Nearly all of California has seen higher than average rainfall totals over the past several weeks, with totals 400%-600% above average values, according to the weather service.

Climate change has made extreme precipitation in California twice as likely, with extreme weather predicted to generate 200%-400% of surface runoff, rainwater that cannot be absorbed by soil, by the end of the century, according to research by the UCLA environment and sustainability department.

The recent severe weather prompted Gov. Gavin Newsom to declare a state of emergency last week, allowing local jurisdictions and state agencies to respond to the changing weather more quickly, while President Joe Biden issued an emergency declaration late Sunday evening to support the storm response.

‘Enormous cyclone’ to strike Wednesday

While Tuesday's storm system was expected to push inland in the evening, bringing widespread mountain snows across the Great Basin, an "enormous cyclone forming well off the coast of the North American continent will bring yet another Atmospheric River toward the West Coast — this time impacting areas further north from northern California northward up the coast of the Pacific Northwest" on Wednesday, the weather service said.

"When all is said and done, precipitation totals over the next few days will be in the 3-7 inch range through the Transverse Range of southern California, northward along the central to northern California coast ranges and through the Sierra," it said.

The weather service warned that widespread considerable flood impacts were likely across large swaths of California into western Nevada.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-new...-thousands-flee-homes-leaves-1-dead-rcna65046
 

I was reading about this this morning. Mother nature can help ease a drought but sometimes it's too much at once!
I see some people that live in high country are ok but can't go anywhere. They're still in better shape.
 
Now, if California had only had the foresight to build much needed reservoirs, much, if not all this water and those of the past could be saved and used during its dry spells.
It didn't seem logical to build reservoirs during a decade of drought. Plus northern valley folks are mad at Angelenos for siphoning off their crop water to feed their stupid water sculptures...or so the argument goes.

What went wrong is that the annual funds the state provides for maintaining levees, reservoirs and dams might be getting wasted on getting state managers wasted.
 
It didn't seem logical to build reservoirs during a decade of drought. Plus northern valley folks are mad at Angelenos for siphoning off their crop water to feed their stupid water sculptures...or so the argument goes.
I think that's true. When I worked for the IID in Imperial valley, I remember how mad San Diego got when the Metropolitan water district of LA, paid to have all the drain ditches paved so the valley farmers could sell that water that either evaporated or normally flowed into the Salton Sea to LA.
 
I was hoping local lakes and reservoirs around the area would refill.

I saw Ellen DeGeneres for a moment on TV saying they told her to shelter in place even tho' most of Montecito was under evacuation.
 
For the vast majority of people in the state, pretty much a yawn like all major winter storms periods. Areas that make news tend to mostly be the same ones every winter. Low lying creek, river, coastal areas, residential areas built on unstable slopes, real estate and their backdoor local politicians were all too eager to approve of, and burn areas from recent wildfires where mud slides occur. So local tv news reporters will sit at these places for days, eager to make it all exciting. Places like the Russian River and Capitola. The above noted, there have indeed been a few more spectacular stories like the big wave destruction along Monterey Bay shores.

trash-11023.jpg

About 2am when the center of a cold core low moved through briefly with gusty winds, heavy rain, this plastic garbage container for paper/plastic stuff, noisily lifted up, flew, and tumbled 20 feet, spewing contents. Container for my unit also tipped over spewing minor contents. At sunrise, went outside and cleaned that up the soggy stuff with some pieces ending up 200 feet away. In our neighborhood, this small urban tree snapped.

tree-11023.jpg
 
For the vast majority of people in the state, pretty much a yawn like all major winter storms periods. Areas that make news tend to mostly be the same ones every winter. Low lying creek, river, coastal areas, residential areas built on unstable slopes, real estate and their backdoor local politicians were all too eager to approve of, and burn areas from recent wildfires where mud slides occur. So local tv news reporters will sit at these places for days, eager to make it all exciting. Places like the Russian River and Capitola. The above noted, there have indeed been a few more spectacular stories like the big wave destruction along Monterey Bay shores.

View attachment 261702

About 2am when the center of a cold core low moved through briefly with gusty winds, heavy rain, this plastic garbage container for paper/plastic stuff, noisily lifted up, flew, and tumbled 20 feet, spewing contents. Container for my unit also tipped over spewing minor contents. At sunrise, went outside and cleaned that up the soggy stuff with some pieces ending up 200 feet away. In our neighborhood, this small urban tree snapped.

View attachment 261704
Greater Sacramento had over a dozen trees completely up-rooted by winds and nearly 700 requests to remove partially toppled and dangerously leaning trees since the New Year’s Eve storm. On my local news they reported 14 drownings due to flooding, almost all of the victims were driving where they shouldn't have been, and one death due to winds. She was also driving.

But yes, absolutely, conditions are sensationalized, and people stop paying attention because they figure the weatherman is exaggerating, and they get careless. Weather reports are still calling those storms "cyclones". But they were the same storms we get every year.

Most of the state was fine during the 5 back-to-back storms, and only one of them caused some damage along the coast and fairly widespread power outages....the one that might marginally qualify as a cyclone but was never reported as one before.
 
This article claims reservoirs are filling up ... hope so.


Across the Bay Area and California, the past two weeks of soaking storms have brought mudslides, floods and power outages. They’ve also brought something not seen in years — billions of gallons of water rushing into reservoirs, renewing hopes that the state’s relentless drought may come to an end this spring.

Six atmospheric river storms since the end of December have dumped half a year’s worth of rain on San Francisco, Oakland, Sacramento and other Northern California cities in two weeks. The ferocious weather has saturated soils and bolstered runoff while also smothering the Sierra Nevada in snow, leaving the statewide snowpack Wednesday at a breathtaking 226% of its historical average and setting up reservoirs to receive more water when it melts later this spring.

“There’s no getting around it. This is great for reservoir storage,” said Jeffrey Mount, a professor emeritus at UC Davis and senior fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California’s water center. “It will clearly help the drought. We are likely to have full reservoirs this spring becaus



https://www.msn.com/en-us/weather/t...r-supplies-after-years-of-drought/ar-AA16eGR7
 
On the news last night a teacher was on her way to work with her 5 year old son and drove into water. The boy was swept out of his mother’s arms by the current and now it’s been 5 days.

I know from experience that sometimes you don’t realize how deep the water is until you find yourself in it. This happened at night to us when we first moved to Kansas and found ourselves floating down the street.

Fortunately within a block we were out of it and the car started right up and we drove away. People at work said certain streets always flooded during heavy rains so after that we knew to avoid them.
 
News rpts today have confirmed CA is now back in "moderate drought" conditions as the rainstorms have increased reservoir capacity substantially. Two weeks ago over half the state was in the worst category of "exceptional drought".

The reservoir in Lake Oroville (in the Sierras) has risen 97' with more to be added. Oroville had dropped to its lowest level ever pre-storms, to less than 36' deep.

Most people seem to have missed the 2021 announcement that another state reservoir is currently being built to increase capacity.

CA is similar to ALL OTHER STATES in percentage of developments built in the WUI (Wildland Urban Interface). Due to our larger population this 1/3 of total homes means that 11 million people own or rent in areas prone to fire, flood, and quakes.
 
News rpts today have confirmed CA is now back in "moderate drought" conditions as the rainstorms have increased reservoir capacity substantially. Two weeks ago over half the state was in the worst category of "exceptional drought".

The reservoir in Lake Oroville (in the Sierras) has risen 97' with more to be added. Oroville had dropped to its lowest level ever pre-storms, to less than 36' deep.

Most people seem to have missed the 2021 announcement that another state reservoir is currently being built to increase capacity.

CA is similar to ALL OTHER STATES in percentage of developments built in the WUI (Wildland Urban Interface). Due to our larger population this 1/3 of total homes means that 11 million people own or rent in areas prone to fire, flood, and quakes.
Wildland Urban Interface. Awesome; an actual title for the massive swaths of Calif real estate where city meets open country. That's gotta be worth billions, right? But it's ok. It's for the trees....well, and lots of fancy parties, but mostly the trees.
 
CA is similar to ALL OTHER STATES in percentage of developments built in the WUI (Wildland Urban Interface). Due to our larger population this 1/3 of total homes means that 11 million people own or rent in areas prone to fire, flood, and quakes.
Some financial whiz-kid swept his hand across the air as s/he said "Wildland Urban Interface," and a Governor's advisor smiled and said "Oh, that's good! That's really good."

:LOL: :ROFLMAO: LMFAO! I can't get over it.
 
I'm thrilled for the rain. But it hasn't stopped my worry. What will next year bring and the years after that? I know I worry too much. I'm also concerned about the snow pack. I have read that if it gets too warm, too early, the pack will evaporate too much vs. melt and go into the reservoirs.

And of course lawns will continue to be watered and long showers taken.
 
I’m sure all the surfers are hitting the big waves...
 


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