Latest 'atmospheric river' storm renews flood threat in California
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[January 05, 2023]
By Sharon Bernstein and Steve Gorman
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) -Emergency crews braced for the latest bout
of high winds and torrential rains sweeping California on Wednesday,
renewing the threat of power outages and deadly flooding that gripped
parts of San Francisco Bay and Sacramento over New Year's weekend.
The "atmospheric river" - an airborne current of dense moisture flowing
from the ocean - was expected to drench much of California ahead of a
storm front bringing additional showers to low-lying areas and more snow
to the Sierra Nevada Mountains through Thursday.
The incoming blast of extreme winter weather - the next in a succession
of storms expected to wash over California in the coming weeks -
originated from a sprawling, hurricane-force low pressure system
churning over the eastern Pacific, forecasters said.
The National Weather Service (NWS) predicted widespread rainfall totals
of 3 to 6 inches, with up to 3 feet of fresh snow in Sierras.
Authorities warned the heavy downpours would likely unleash flash
flooding and mudslides, especially in areas where the ground remains
saturated from rains that soaked northern California days earlier.
Fire-ravaged hill slopes are also particularly vulnerable to slides.
High-wind warnings were posted along the central California coast north
through the Bay area and into extreme northern California and Oregon.
The National Weather Service (NWS) said gale-force gusts were expected
to uproot trees, shear off limbs and knock down power lines, disrupting
electricity service in many areas.
San Francisco's transit agency halted its famed cable car service
through Thursday due to inclement weather, and scores of commercial
flights were canceled at San Francisco International Airport.
Stormy weather was blamed for at least one traffic death in the north
Bay city of Fairfield, where pooled water on a roadway sent a car
crashing into a utility pole, killing the driver, the San Francisco
Chronicle reported.
Voluntary evacuation notices were issued for homes along three roads in
a flood-prone area of Alameda County, across the bay from San Francisco,
citing threats posed by "the impending storms, saturated soils and
current runoff."
EMERGENCY FOOTING
Governor Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency on Wednesday to
support the state's winter weather hazards response, and activated
California's flood operations center.
The governor's Office of Emergency Services said it had staged crews in
several northern counties likely to be hardest hit by flooding, and
where previous wildfires have stripped hillsides of vegetation, leaving
them at high risk of mudslides.
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Sandbags are seen at a restaurant door
in the town of Watsonville as rainstorms approach northern
California, U.S., January 4, 2023. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
State Natural Resources Secretary Wade Crowfoot urged residents in
such areas to stay indoors unless ordered to evacuate, and to
prepare for power outages by charging electrical devices and having
flashlights and candles handy.
CASUALTIES
Sacramento County crews were still out on Wednesday repairing levee
breaches along the Cosumnes River, near Sacramento, where flooding
last weekend closed Highway 99, Crowfoot said at a news briefing in
the state capital.
At least three deaths have been attributed to last weekend's storm.
Two bodies were recovered from Cosumnes River flood zone, and a
72-year-old man was found dead under a fallen tree in Santa Cruz,
authorities said.
The latest round of extreme weather was the second in a series of
potentially damaging storms expected to hit the state over the next
seven to 10 days, Nancy Ward, director of emergency services, told
reporters. The state operations center had been placed at its
highest level, she said.
“We anticipate that this may be one of the most challenging and
impactful series of storms to touch down in California in the last
five years,” she said.
Fallen trees, already weakened by prolonged drought and now left
poorly anchored in rain-soaked soil, were likely to pose a
significant hazard in the upcoming storms, said Karla Nemeth,
director of the state Department of Water Resources.
She said coastal areas from Los Angeles north to Crescent City near
the Oregon border faced the greatest flood potential, especially,
especially in Mendocino County along the Russian and Navarro rivers.
Nemeth said the increasing frequency and intensity of episodic
floods punctuating California's multi-year droughts are symptomatic
of extreme swings between wet and dry wrought by climate change.
The good news was that recent storms have left the Sierra snowpack,
a major source of California's water supplies, at well above average
for this time of year, though far more will need to accumulate
through winter to end the drought, experts say.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento, Calif.; Writing and
additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by
Josie Kao, Grant McCool and Michael Perry)
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