California is deluged by record rain with more storms coming
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[January 12, 2023]
By Kate Fishman
MENDOCINO, Calif. (Reuters) -The seventh consecutive atmospheric river
since Christmas dumped more rain on Northern California on Wednesday,
offering little relief for a state already battered by floods, gale
force winds, power outages and evacuations of entire towns.
While Wednesday's deluge was relatively minor, with less rainfall and
mostly contained to northwestern California, another atmospheric river
was expected to drench most of the state this weekend, said Zack Taylor,
a meteorologist with the National Weather Service's Weather Prediction
Center.
The parade of storms is forecast to continue, bringing even more heavy
rain next week, the weather service said.
That will add to record-breaking rainfall.
Downtown San Francisco recorded a phenomenal 13.6 inches (34.5 cm) of
rain from Dec. 26 until Wednesday morning, while San Francisco
International Airport, the city of Oakland and the city of Stockton all
recorded 16-day records over the same period, the National Weather
Service said.
Large stretches of central California received over half their normal
annual rainfall since Dec. 26.
Atmospheric rivers are characterized by dense moisture funneled into
California from the tropical Pacific.
Gusts of wind were shaking trees and rainfall was consistent throughout
the morning along the coast of Mendocino County, about 160 miles (260
km) north of San Francisco. Large trees toppled and debris were left
behind by a wild ocean. The toll was evident along Highway 1, with
utility trucks deploying toward power outages.
Dozens of roadways across the state were made impassable by mudslides
and snow as the state's department of transportation on Wednesday
strongly urged drivers to stay off the roads until crews could clear the
way.
The storms have killed at least 17 people since the start of the year,
California Governor Gavin Newsom said on Tuesday.
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The rain-swollen Sacramento River rises
to the foundation level of homes along the river in West Sacramento,
California, U.S. January 11, 2023. REUTERS/Fred Greaves
Another victim was found on Wednesday morning, when rescue workers
in Sonoma County found a car 100 yards (meters) off a roadway
submerged in about 10 feet (3 meters) of floodwater with a dead
43-year-old woman inside, officials reported.
In Mendocino County, a 68-year-old woman died when she was struck by
a tree that fell into her home as she slept, and the 37-year-old
driver of a tree service boom truck was killed when his vehicle left
the roadway and rolled several times, the sheriff's department said.
The search for a five-year-old boy who was swept away by raging
floodwaters near San Miguel, a small village in Central California,
continued on Wednesday, the local sheriff's department said.
Wind gusts have downed powerlines, knocking out electricity to
54,000 homes and businesses as of Wednesday afternoon, according to
data from Poweroutage.us, down from nearly half a million outages
over the weekend.
Many of the evacuation orders issued across the state have been
rescinded, but not in the rural town of Planada in Central
California where neighborhoods and businesses remained underwater.
The rain has helped alleviate but has not ended a two-decade
drought. Statewide reservoir storage is only 82% of average for this
time of year, the state Department of Water Resources said, warning
that the remainder of the rainy season could underperform and result
in a lower than average rainfall year.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Chicago and Daniel Trotta in
Carlsbad, California;Editing by Marguerita Choy and Sandra Maler)
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