The Manila Times

Flash floods soak homes, overturn cars in San Diego

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SAN DIEGO, California: Flash floods inundated homes and overturned cars in the city of San Diego, California, on Monday as torrential rain swept through a large swath of the United States, toppling trees and overflowin­g streets across the state.

Early morning flooding hit the town of Guernevill­e, north of San Francisco, where a creek overflowed after more than 4 inches (10 centimeter­s) of rain fell in 24 hours. Later, the weather system unleashed a severe punch on the south end of the state in the second major rain event of the winter.

Floodwater­s swept away vehicles and caused cars to pile on top of each other in parts of San Diego. Several feet of water inundated the Mountain View, Shelltown and Southcrest neighborho­ods, and multiple highways including Interstate 15.

San Diego resident Eddie Ochoa said it was just sprinkling when he and his sister went out for breakfast on Monday morning. When they returned to their family-owned automobile body shop, the entire block was flooded and his sister’s parked car had been washed away.

“All that happened within an hour,” Ochoa said, guessing that the sewers had backed up. They later found his sister’s car about 3 miles (4.8 kilometers) down the street.

“It’s never been that bad, ever. It’s crazy,” he added.

Over a three-hour period, a whopping 3 in (7.6 cm) of rain fell at nearby National City, while 2 in (5 cm) fell at San Diego Internatio­nal Airport, The San Diego Union-Tribune reported. During the winter, the region typically averages around 2 in of rain a month.

Deputies pulled people to safety after water rushed into homes in the Spring Valley and Casa de Oro neighborho­ods, said San Diego County Sheriff’s Lt. Zee Sanchez. Other residents escaped by wading through waist-high water carrying their cats and dogs.

“Flooding is pretty widespread out there,” Sanchez said. The department aided in a swift-water rescue near Santee, he added. No injuries were reported.

The San Diego River was flooding, the National Weather Service said, warning that crossing roads would be unsafe. The city fire department said it had rescued at least 24 people from the rushing San Diego and Tijuana rivers.

San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria declared a state of emergency, and the city set up shelters to house displaced residents.

The Los Angeles County Office of Emergency Management issued an evacuation warning near Topanga Canyon effective through Tuesday morning due to possible mud or debris flow.

Up north, there’s an avalanche warning through Tuesday morning for the backcountr­y in the mountains around the Lake Tahoe area, which might see more than a foot (30 cm) of snow, said the Sierra Avalanche Center in Truckee, California. The storm is expected to bring up to 8 in (20 cm) of snow to the lake’s shores and up to 14 in (35 cm) with winds gusting up to 60 mi per hour (95 km per hour) in the highest elevations beginning on Monday night.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? DAMAGED IN DELUGE
A woman examines cars damaged by floods after a storm in San Diego, California, on Monday, Jan. 22, 2024.
AP PHOTO DAMAGED IN DELUGE A woman examines cars damaged by floods after a storm in San Diego, California, on Monday, Jan. 22, 2024.

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