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California storm warnings and weather advisories remained in effect Sunday for a substantial portion of the state, as northern and central counties braced for another round of heavy rain and snow in and around the sprawling Sierra Nevada mountain range.
Meanwhile, forecasts indicated milder conditions ahead for Southern California, after the region faced blizzards and dangerous flooding earlier this weekend during a powerful winter storm that the National Weather Service called one of the strongest to ever hit the area. The storm, which knocked out electricity and trapped motorists in their cars as snow blanketed roadways, had dumped more than 5 inches of rain on inland valley areas and brought over 6 feet of snow to parts of the San Gabriel mountains by Sunday morning, according to NWS San Diego.
The first of two upcoming winter storm systems arrived in Northern California before dawn on Sunday.
“Two strong winter storms will bring significant impacts to interior Northern California through early Wed,” NWS Sacramento warned in a tweet shared early on Sunday morning. “The first storm will bring moderate to heavy snow today with 1-2 feet above 2000-3000 feet. Travel is HIGHLY DISCOURAGED!”
In a separate message posted at around 6 a.m. PT, the agency said precipitation had begun to spread while moving inland over Northern California. “Travel conditions will deteriorate over the mountains this morning,” wrote NWS Sacramento.
The National Weather Service has issued numerous bulletins impacting dozens of California counties, which either took effect very early Sunday morning or will take effect later in the afternoon. In anticipation of ongoing blizzards that could bring up to 20 inches of snow to communities at higher elevations, as well as wind gusts potentially reaching 75 mph, some of the agency’s storm and blizzard warnings are scheduled to remain active through Wednesday afternoon.
A winter storm warning is also in effect for much of the Sierra Nevada through Monday morning, when a blizzard warning is due to replace it and remain active through mid-week. Heavy snow is expected across the mountain range, according to the National Weather Service, which said storm conditions could bring between 6 and 20 inches of snow, plus 60 mph wind gusts, to the region on Sunday and Monday. When blizzard conditions hit, snowfall could total between 2 and 6 feet, the agency said, while wind gusts are expected to become even stronger.
“Travel could be very difficult to impossible,” the NWS said. “Blowing snow will cause white-out conditions at times. Downed trees and tree limbs with power outages are possible due to heavy snow and gusty winds. The cold wind chills as low as 30 below zero could cause frostbite on exposed skin in as little as 30 minutes.”
More than 63,000 California utility customers did not have power as of Sunday morning, according to the tracking site poweroutage.us. Counties northeast of Sacramento and in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains were most affected, the tracker showed, with over 55,000 customers experiencing outages in Northern California’s Lake County alone.
As last week’s storm barreled down the West Coast between Wednesday and Saturday, severe weather brought perilous wind gusts that toppled trees and knocked out power lines across California, leaving thousands without electricity and prompting officials to issue the first blizzard warning in decades for Southern California. In Boulder Creek, located in the Santa Cruz mountains south of San Francisco, a 1-year-old child was critically injured after a redwood tree fell on top of a home last Tuesday evening, KTVU reported.
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Search operations are resuming Wednesday along California’s central coast, as rescuers continue to look for a missing boy who was swept away into deadly floodwaters in the San Marcos Creek, near San Miguel, earlier this week.
Locating the child, identified by local law enforcement as 5-year-old Kyle Doan, remains a “top priority,” authorities said, despite the tumultuous weather conditions that have killed at least 17 people across the state and forced rescue teams to temporarily suspend their search for Doan on Monday and Tuesday.
“The Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue operations continue to look for missing 5-year-old Kyle Doan. While he has yet to be located, the search remains our top priority while weather conditions permit,” the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff’s Office said in a tweet shared late Tuesday. “We will update the public with any info regarding this search.”
Their search concluded before 5:20 p.m. “due to low visibility,” the office wrote in another tweet, adding that the search would resume “first thing tomorrow morning.”
Doan was pulled from his parents’ car on Monday when it became inundated with what the San Luis Obispo County Sheriff called “raging” floodwater in a news release. The preliminary search lasted for about five hours that first day before it was discontinued “because the extreme weather conditions were making it unsafe for first responders to continue their efforts,” the sheriff said.
Cal Fire San Luis Obispo County Battalion Chief Travis Craig told the San Luis Obispo Tribune that Doan and his mother were inside a vehicle that was immobilized in rapidly rising waters near the creek during Monday’s flood. Rescuers reportedly found the child’s shoe before their search was called off for the first time, according to the Associated Press.
Doan has short, dirty blond hair and hazel eyes, stands at 4 feet tall and weighs 52 pounds, authorities have said. He was last seen wearing a black puffer jacket with a red liner, blue jeans, and blue and gray Nike tennis shoes. The sheriff’s office in San Luis Obispo said it is pouring all of its available resources, including underwater rescue teams and air operations, into the search for Doan.
“The public is strongly cautioned not to conduct self-initiated searches and put themselves in harms way and become a victim requiring resources that would otherwise be used for searching,” the sheriff said on Tuesday.
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California is bracing for a new round of powerful storms this weekend on the heels of a violent system that claimed six lives this past week and knocked out power to hundreds of thousands of people. The system left waterlogged roads in Southern California and collapsed piers in Northern California, damaging homes and businesses statewide.
While another atmospheric river moves in, communities are scrambling to sandbag, repair levees and prepare for even more power outages, while still cleaning up from the last round of extreme weather.
“When you look around at the wreckage, the rebuilding looks like an arduous process,” Capitola police Capt. Sarah Ryan said. Capitola is a town near Santa Cruz.
Getty Images
Among the six people killed in the storms this week was a toddler who died when a redwood tree fell onto his family home in Sonoma County.
More trouble is ahead for California and the rest of the West, with up to 12 inches of rain in Northern California, and several feet of snow expected in the Sierra Nevada mountains and Oregon. Avalanche warnings are in effect as crews work to decrease the risk.
The National Weather Service reports that some parts of the San Francisco Bay Area could see widespread flooding and mudslides from Saturday through Tuesday.
It’s too early to know the dollar amount of this week’s damage. However, one silver lining to the series of storms that have hit the region over the past several weeks is they have helped to ease the drought. When the snowpack melts, some of the water will refill parched reservoirs, but California is still in extreme drought, so there’s a long way to go.
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