Snow, rain pummel parts of California,
Nevada and Oregon
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[January 11, 2017]
(Reuters) - Heavy rain and snowfall
hit parts of California, Nevada and Oregon early on Wednesday, causing
roads to be closed, schools to cancel classes and widespread flooding
along already swollen waterways.
A National Weather Service blizzard warning remained in effect until
late on Wednesday morning for ski resort towns in the greater Lake Tahoe
area, including Truckee and South Lake Tahoe, California, and
neighboring Nevada enclaves of Stateline and Incline Village.
Snow accumulations of 5 to 10 feet (1.5 to 3 meters) were forecast above
elevations of 7,000 feet, with fierce wind gusts reaching 100 miles (160
km) per hour along the ridge of the Sierra Nevada mountain range, the
National Weather Service reported.
An avalanche warning was issued for much of the same mountain regions.
"Those venturing outdoors may become lost or disoriented so persons in
the warning area are advised to stay indoors," the weather service said.
Roadways, including Interstate 80 near the border of California and
Nevada, were closed on Wednesday morning.
Schools throughout the region canceled Wednesday classes, including the
Portland Public Schools district in Oregon, attended by about 50,000
students.
Several flood warnings remained in effect until Wednesday morning for
lower elevations in northern and central California and in western
Nevada, where creeks and rivers were expected to overrun their banks.
Several communities in the region opened evacuation centers for people
who heeded warnings from officials to move to higher ground to avoid
flooding.
Heavy downpours sent a wall of mud down onto a house in Fairfax,
California, trapping an elderly couple and their two granddaughters,
according to local media. Firefighters rescued the couple and children
and no one was injured, an ABC affiliate reported.
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A private contractor clears deep snow from a driveway during a heavy
winter storm in Incline Village, Nevada, U.S. January 10, 2017
REUTERS/Bob Strong
A series of floodgates on the Sacramento River, just upstream of
California's capital, were opened for the first time in 11 years on
Tuesday to divert high water around the city and into a special
drainage channel, said Lauren Hersh, a spokeswoman for the state
Water Resources Department.
The cascade of rain and snow marked the fourth round of extreme
precipitation unleashed during the past month by a weather pattern
meteorologists call an "atmospheric river" - a dense plume of
moisture flowing from the tropical Pacific into California.
The storms have brought some sorely needed replenishment to many
reservoirs left low by five years of drought, while restoring
California's mountain snowpack to 135 percent of its average
water-content level for this time of year as of Tuesday, state water
officials said.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; editing by Dominic
Evans)
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