California picks up debris from latest storm, braces for the next
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[January 13, 2023]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - Rain-soaked Californians took advantage
of a break in a weeks-long deluge to haul away dead trees, restore
downed power lines and prepare new stacks of sandbags before another
series of storms hits the state beginning Friday.
In Monterey County along the state's central coast, communities near the
still-rising Salinas River were under an evacuation order, as
authorities warned that the cresting waterway could cut off homes and
businesses from essential services.
As many as 19 people have been killed in the storms, including two
deaths announced on Wednesday - one person found dead in a submerged car
in Sonoma County north of San Francisco, and another who was pulled from
the American River in El Dorado County on Jan. 3.
A five-year-old boy swept away in San Luis Obispo County had still not
been found by Wednesday evening.
At least two more storm systems were set to pound California and the
Pacific Northwest starting Friday and over the weekend, the National
Weather Service said, including another atmospheric river, systems of
dense moisture funneled into California from the tropical Pacific. The
state has already been hit with seven such weather systems over the past
two weeks.
Precipitation from the storms will fall as rain along the coast and snow
in the Sierra Nevada and other mountain ranges, the National Weather
Service said.
In Monterey County, water from prior storms continued to swell the
Salinas River, officials said. Some residents of the Monterey Peninsula
and parts of the Salinas area could be cut off from other communities
for as many as three days as roads flood.
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A road closed due to flooding from the
Salinas River is seen in Salinas, California, U.S. January 12, 2023.
REUTERS/Nathan Frandino
Monterey County Sheriff Tina Nieto said her officers had gone
door-to-door in communities affected by evacuation orders, urging
people to leave. She said the river was expected to hit flood stage
by 11 p.m. Thursday night (2 a.m. ET on Friday), and remain high
through the weekend.
Dozens of roadways across the state were made impassable by
mudslides and snow as the state's department of transportation urged
drivers to stay off impacted roads until crews could clear the way.
In the state capital of Sacramento, crews continued to clear fallen
trees and restore power on Thursday, aiming to complete as much of
the work as possible before rains begin again on Friday.
The heavy rains have eased California's historic drought but not
ended it, the U.S. Drought Monitor showed on Thursday. The state is
no longer considered to be in extreme drought or exceptional
drought, the two worst categories, but much of the state is still
considered to be experiencing moderate or severe drought conditions.
Even with more atmospheric rivers in the immediate forecast, the
state's water system will remained strained in coming years without
new infrastructure to capture more storm water, restore flood plains
and recycle wastewater.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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