The Phoenix area was hit by a record downpour that closed sections
of two major freeways, and the National Weather Service issued
flash-flood warnings for parts of Arizona, California, Nevada and
Utah.
"This is a life-threatening situation," the NWS said in an advisory.
In Phoenix, a record-setting 3.29 inches of rain fell on Sky Harbor
International Airport, beating the 2.91 inches seen in September
1939 for the city's most rainfall in a single day.
One community in the southeast of Phoenix saw more than 5-1/2 inches
of rain.
Arizona Governor Jan Brewer declared a statewide emergency for the
affected areas. "If you must travel, please do so with caution & BE
SAFE!" Brewer said on Twitter, using the hashtag
#TurnAroundDontDrown.
The downpour turned some highways into lakes. Officials said parts
of both Interstates 10 and 17 were shut to traffic. A section of
Interstate 15 in Nevada was closed too.
Arizona television stations broadcast footage of some abandoned cars
nearly completely submerged. Authorities said several people were
rescued from vehicles, and that the roof of a grocery store had
partially collapsed.
Late Monday afternoon, fire officials in suburban Mesa said as many
as 100 homes were evacuated due to flooding. Two parks also were
evacuated because of the possible threat caused by electric
transformers that were partially submerged.
At its peak, airport officials reported flights at Sky Harbor were
delayed for 25 minutes. Some 20,000 people were without power across
the Phoenix area. Multiple schools canceled classes for the day.
A 76-year-old woman died in Pinal County just south of Phoenix after
she and her husband tried to cross a flooded wash.
Their car got stuck, and while the man reached the shore, his wife
was swept away, the local sheriff's office said.
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Further south in Tucson, authorities said a woman in her 50s was
killed when her car was swept downstream after becoming stuck in a
rain-swollen creek. The Tucson fire department said the woman's
vehicle was stuck against a pedestrian bridge, entirely submerged. A
crew immediately began getting equipment for a rescue when the car
was pushed under the bridge, it said.
Weather officials said Tucson also set a single-day record with 1.26
inches of rain dumped at Tucson International Airport. That broke
the record of 0.94 of an inch from 1919.
Trooper Chelsea Webster of the Nevada Highway Patrol said roughly 50
miles along Interstate 15 northbound linking Las Vegas to Arizona
was closed to regular traffic in the Moapa Valley because of
flooding, and emergency workers plucked at least 15 stranded
motorists from their cars.
Nevada Highway Patrol responded to nearly 70 accidents in the Las
Vegas area since the rains started falling, 21 of which involved
injuries, Webster said.
(Reporting by David Schwartz; Additional reporting by Cynthia
Johnston in Las Vegas and Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Editing
by Daniel Wallis, Sandra Maler and Peter Cooney)
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