Tropical Storm Hilary releases fury on Southern California
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[August 21, 2023]
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -The first tropical storm to hit Los
Angeles in more than 80 years unleashed furious floods across parts of
Southern California more accustomed to drought, as officials urged the
public to stay safe as they began to count the cost of damage.
The National Weather Service downgraded the hurricane to a tropical
depression but not before California Governor Gavin Newsom declared a
state of emergency for much of Southern California, with flash flood
warnings until at least 3 a.m. (1000 GMT) on Monday.
Mountain and desert areas could get 5 to 10 inches (12 to 25 cm) of rare
rain, as much as the deserts typically see in a year, forecasters said.
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said she was still worried that people
could let down their guard if Hilary left them initially unharmed but
later bands of the storm swung back to surprise those who were not
prepared.
"We know that it could get much worse," Bass told a news briefing on
Sunday. "My concern is that people will be a little dismissive and go
out when we need people to stay at home, to stay safe."
Hilary's center was expected to move quickly across Nevada on Monday,
with the storm forecast to dissipate later in the day, the weather
service said.
The storm had passed northward through Mexico's Baja California
peninsula. It killed at least one person in Mexico, triggering flash
flooding and sweeping away roads.
Images on social media showed raging, muddy torrents gushing down eroded
streets.
It crossed the border on Sunday afternoon, hitting San Diego county with
its first tropical storm ever recorded and becoming the first to pelt
Los Angeles county since 1939.
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A view shows flood water moving across
the road during Tropical Storm Hilary, in Palm Springs, California,
U.S. August 20, 2023, in this screengrab from a social media video.
Palm Springs Fire Department/Handout via REUTERS
San Bernardino county, to the east of Los Angeles, ordered
evacuations of towns in the mountains and valleys where social media
images showed torrents of water, mud, rock and trees.
In more populated Ventura county northwest of Los Angeles, the
National Weather Service warned of life-threatening flooding from
heavy rains, which dumped up to 2 inches (5 cm) of rain within two
hours.
U.S. President Joe Biden ordered federal agencies to move personnel
and supplies into the region.
Officials said Los Angeles county's 75,000 homeless people were
especially vulnerable, as were hillside canyons and areas recently
denuded by wildfires.
As a precaution, the two largest school districts in the state, in
Los Angeles and San Diego, canceled school on Monday.
The storm stunned people in the nearby town of Rancho Mirage, where
water and debris rushed over closed roads and stranded at least one
pickup truck in water that rose nearly to the top of its bed.
"It's quite amazing. I've never seen anything like this," said Sean
Julian, 54, a resident of the town. "I'm seeing a lot more trees
down. And there's a big tree that just fell over there, and I
probably shouldn't be out here."
(Reporting by Reuters staff; Writing by Daniel Trotta; Editing by
Clarence Fernandez)
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