Daily Camera (Boulder)

Hilary downgraded to Category 2 hurricane

- By Ignacio Martinez and Stefanie Dazio

CABO SAN LUCAS, MEXICO >> Hurricane Hilary roared toward Mexico’s Baja California peninsula late Saturday as a downgraded but still dangerous Category 2 hurricane likely to bring “catastroph­ic” flooding to the region and cross into the southweste­rn U.S. as a tropical storm.

Meteorolog­ists warned that despite weakening, the storm remained treacherou­s.

One person drowned Saturday in the Mexican town of Santa Rosalia, on the peninsula’s eastern coast, when a vehicle was swept away in an overflowin­g stream. Rescue workers managed to save four other people, said Edith Aguilar Villavicen­cio, the mayor of Mulege township.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether officials considered the fatality related to the hurricane, but video posted by local officials showed torrents of water coursing through the town’s streets.

Forecaster­s said the storm was still expected to enter the history books as the first tropical storm to hit Southern California in 84 years, bringing flash floods, mudslides, isolated tornadoes, high winds and power outages. The forecast prompted authoritie­s to issue an evacuation advisory for Santa Catalina Island, urging residents and beachgoers to leave the tourist destinatio­n 23 miles off the coast.

Elizabeth Adams, a meteorolog­ist at the National Weather Service San Diego office, said rain could fall up to 3 inches (7.62 centimeter­s) an hour across Southern California’s mountains and deserts, from late Sunday morning into the afternoon. The intense rainfall during those hours could cause widespread and life-threatenin­g flash floods.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom proclaimed a state of emergency, and officials had urged people to finish their preparatio­ns before sundown Saturday. It would be too late by Sunday, one expert said.

The hurricane is the latest major climate disaster to wreak havoc across the U.S., Canada and Mexico.

Hawaii’s island of Maui is still reeling from last week’s blaze that killed over 100 people and ravaged the historic town of Lahaina, making it the deadliest U.S. wildfire in more than a century. In Canada, firefighte­rs on Saturday continued to battle blazes during the nation’s worst fire season on record.

Hilary brought heavy rain and flooding to Mexico and the southweste­rn U.S. on Saturday, ahead of the storm’s expected Sunday border crossing. Forecaster­s warned it could dump up to 10 inches

(25 centimeter­s) — a year’s worth of rain for some areas — in southern California and southern Nevada.

“This does not lessen the threat, especially the flood threat,” Jamie Rhome, the U.S. National Hurricane Center’s deputy director, said during a Saturday briefing to announce the storm’s downgraded status. “Don’t let the weakening trend and the intensity lower your guard.”

Meteorolog­ists also expected the storm to churn up “life-threatenin­g” surf and rip currents, including waves up to 40 feet (12 meters) high, along Mexico’s Pacific coast. Dozens sought refuge at storm shelters in the twin resorts of Los Cabos at the southern tip of the Baja peninsula, and firefighte­rs rescued a family in San Jose del Cabo after the resort was hit by driving rain and wind.

In Tijuana, fire department head Rafael Carrillo voiced the fear at the back of everyone’s mind in the border city of 1.9 million people, particular­ly residents who live in homes on steep hillsides.

“If you hear noises, or the ground cracking, it is important for you to check it and get out as fast as possible, because the ground can weaken and your home could collapse,” Carrillo said.

Tijuana ordered all beaches closed Saturday, and set up a half dozen storm shelters at sports complexes and government offices.

Mexico’s navy evacuated 850 people from islands off the Baja coast, and deployed almost 3,000 troops for emergency operations. In La Paz, the picturesqu­e capital of Baja California Sur state on the Sea of Cortez, police patrolled closed beaches to keep swimmers out of the whipped-up surf.

The U.S. hurricane center posted tropical storm and potential flood warnings for Southern California from the Pacific coast to interior mountains and deserts. The San Bernardino County sheriff issued evacuation warnings for several mountain and foothill communitie­s ahead of the storm, while Orange County sent out its own alert for anyone living in a wildfire burn scar in the Santa Ana Mountains’ Silverado and Williams canyons.

Authoritie­s in Los Angeles scrambled to get the homeless off the streets and into shelters, and officials ordered all state beaches in San Diego and Orange counties closed.

Across the region, municipali­ties ran out of free sandbags and grocery shelves emptied out as residents stockpiled supplies. The U.S. National Park Service closed California’s Joshua Tree National Park and Mojave National Preserve to keep visitors from becoming stranded amid flooding.

Major League Baseball reschedule­d three Sunday games in Southern California, moving them to Saturday as part of split doublehead­ers, and Spacex delayed the launch of a satellite-carrying rocket from a base on California’s central coast until at least Monday.

The White House said President Joe Biden had been briefed on the latest preparedne­ss plans ahead of the hurricane’s turn to the U.S. “I urge everyone, everyone in the path of this storm, to take precaution­s and listen to the guidance of state and local officials,” he said.

Hilary on Friday had rapidly grown into an exceedingl­y dangerous Category 4 major hurricane, with its top sustained winds peaking at 145 mph (230 kph). Its winds dropped to 115 mph (185 kph) early Saturday as a Category 3 storm, before further weakening to 100 mph (161 kph) as a Category 2.

By late afternoon Saturday, it was centered 600 miles south-southeast of San Diego, California. Moving north-northwest at 17 mph (28 kph), the storm was expected to turn more toward the north and pick up forward speed.

The hurricane was expected to brush past Punta Eugenia on the Pacific coast before making a nighttime landfall along a sparsely populated area of the peninsula about 200 miles south of the Pacific port city of Ensenada.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cal Fire Firefighte­r-paramedic Capt. Tyler Williams checks the sandbags set outside of his garage in Seal Beach, Calif., Friday. Hurricane Hilary is churning off Mexico’s Pacific coast as a powerful Category 4storm threatenin­g to unleash torrential rains on the mudslide-prone border city of Tijuana before heading into Southern California as the first tropical storm there in 84years.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cal Fire Firefighte­r-paramedic Capt. Tyler Williams checks the sandbags set outside of his garage in Seal Beach, Calif., Friday. Hurricane Hilary is churning off Mexico’s Pacific coast as a powerful Category 4storm threatenin­g to unleash torrential rains on the mudslide-prone border city of Tijuana before heading into Southern California as the first tropical storm there in 84years.

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