The Niagara Falls Review

California’s snowpack boosts flood concerns

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RICH PEDRONCELI and SCOTT SMITH

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHILLIPS STATION, Calif. — As big snowflakes fell high in California’s Sierra Nevada on Thursday, surveyors on snowshoes measured the deepest springtime snowpack in years and said it boosted concerns about destructiv­e floods when all that snow melts.

Snow in the Sierra Nevada begins melting this time of year as the weather warms, and California is already waterlogge­d after storms slammed the state in January and February, flooding communitie­s and washing out roads.

If more stormy weather hits the state and its mountains soon, snowmelt could speed up, putting pressure on reservoirs, some already brimming full and spilling over, officials said.

“It’s something that we pay very close attention to,” said Frank Gehrke, chief of the California Cooperativ­e Snow Surveys Program, who led a small crew of surveyors into a snowy meadow surrounded by pine trees. “It’s going to depend on how the spring plays out.”

The Sierra snowpack’s overall water content measured 164 per cent of normal Wednesday, according to the state’s electronic monitors throughout the mountain range.

It was even higher at Phillips Station near Lake Tahoe where Gehrke’s manual measuremen­t — plunging a rod into the snow nearly 2.5 metres — showed its water-content at 183 per cent of normal.

Snowdrifts are up to 6 metres deep at higher elevations in the central and southern parts of the range, he said.

The snowpack stretches along 644 kilometres of the Sierra Nevada, creating an icy reservoir that provides roughly one-third of irrigation and drinking water to the nation’s most populous state during hot, dry months of the year.

The deep snowdrifts today contrast to the situation two years ago at the height of California’s fiveyear drought, when Gov. Jerry Brown travelled with surveyors to the same spot and there was no measurable snow.

He later ordered residents to use less water at home — a first for California. Hundreds of domestic wells ran dry during the drought. Many were in rural farming communitie­s and some California­ns were forced to drink bottled water and bathe from buckets.

Some farmers in the state that leads the nation in producing fruits, vegetables and nuts, drew down wells to grow their crops, while others left fields unplanted.

Drought eased last winter, and monster storms in recent months have put a major dent in the fiveyear drought.

It’s unclear whether the governor will lift his emergency drought declaratio­n, which remains in place despite heavy storms. Brown could decide in April, Gehrke said.

This snowpack is the densest with water since 2011, the year before extreme drought hit California marked by the state’s driest four-year period on record, said Doug Carlson, a spokesman for the California Department of Water Resources.

“When the history of this winter’s wet season is written, undoubtedl­y it’ll make note of the fact that this is a wet season that helped alleviate much of the drought,” Carlson said.

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 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The sun breaks through clouds that brought snow to the Sierra Nevada, Thursday, near Echo Summit, Calif. The California Department of Water Resources held it’s manual snow survey at nearby Phillips Station, Thursday, and found the snowpack’s water content at 183 percent of normal for that location at this time of year. Overall, the state’s electronic snow monitors show the Sierra Nevada snowpack at 164 percent of normal.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The sun breaks through clouds that brought snow to the Sierra Nevada, Thursday, near Echo Summit, Calif. The California Department of Water Resources held it’s manual snow survey at nearby Phillips Station, Thursday, and found the snowpack’s water content at 183 percent of normal for that location at this time of year. Overall, the state’s electronic snow monitors show the Sierra Nevada snowpack at 164 percent of normal.

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