Miami Herald (Sunday)

Pacific coast battens down the hatches as Hurricane Hilary threatens ‘catastroph­ic’ flooding

- BY IGNACIO MARTINEZ AND JULIE WATSON

A weakening Hurricane Hilary headed for Mexico’s Baja California on Saturday

Facing South Florida with Jim DeFede, 8 a.m.: As kids are heading back to school, Jim brings you an exclusive joint interview with the superinten­dents of Miami-Dade and Broward schools in this one-hour special. as the U.S. National Hurricane Center predicted “catastroph­ic and lifethreat­ening flooding” for the peninsula and for the southweste­rn United

States, where it was forecast to cross the border as a tropical storm on Sunday.

Officials issued an evacuation advisory for the tourist destinatio­n of Santa Catalina Island, 23 miles off the Southern California coast, while first responders as far north as Los Angeles scrambled to get the homeless off the streets and into shelters.

Hilary was expected to plow into Mexico’s Baja peninsula on Saturday night before rushing northward and entering the history books as the first tropical storm to hit Southern California in 84 years.

“I don’t think any of us — I know me particular­ly — never thought I’d be standing here talking about a hurricane or a tropical storm,” said Janice Hahn, chair of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s.

The U.S. National Hurricane Center issued tropical storm and potential flood warnings for a wide swath of Southern California from the Pacific coast to interior mountains and deserts. The San Bernardino County sheriff on Saturday issued evacuation warnings for several mountain and foothill communitie­s ahead of the storm.

“This is being labeled as historic, life-threatenin­g and potentiall­y catastroph­ic rainfall for Southern California and a good chunk of the desert Southwest in general,” said John Cangialosi, a senior hurricane specialist at the National Hurricane Center. “That is because we could see about a year’s worth of rain from this event for those regions.” Mexico’s Navy evacuated 850 people from islands off the Baja coast, and deployed almost 3,000 troops for emergency operations. In Nevada, Gov. Joe Lombardo activated 100 Nevada National Guardsmen to provide support in areas that could be impacted by flash floods this weekend.

After rapidly gaining power Friday, Hilary slowed by Saturday but remained a major Category 3 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 115 mph, down from 145 mph at its peak.

By mid-day Saturday, the storm was centered about 350 miles south-southeast of Punta Eugenia, one of the westernmos­t spurs on Mexico’s southern Baja peninsula. The hurricane was expected to brush past Punta Eugenia before making landfall along a sparsely populated area of the Baja peninsula at a point about 200 miles south of the Pacific port city of Ensenada.

It was still 710 miles south-southeast of San Diego, California. It was moving north-northwest at 16 mph and was expected to turn more toward the north and pick up speed.

It is then expected to continue northward up the peninsula, raising fears that heavy rains could cause dangerous flooding in the border city of Tijuana, where many homes in the city of 1.9 million cling precarious­ly to steep hillsides.

Mayor Montserrat Caballero Ramirez said the city was setting up four shelters in high-risk zones and warning people in those areas.

“We are a vulnerable city, being on one of the most visited borders in the world and because of our landscape,” she said.

Concern was rising in the U.S., too.

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. Cities across the region, including in Arizona, were offering sandbags to safeguard properties against floodwater­s. Major League Baseball reschedule­d three Sunday games in Southern California, moving them to Saturday as part of split doublehead­ers,

Deputies with the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department took to the road to urge homeless people living in riverbeds to seek shelter. Authoritie­s in the city were arranging food, cots and shelters for those who needed them.

SpaceX delayed the launch of a satellite-carrying rocket from a base on California’s central coast until at least Monday. The company said conditions in the Pacific could make it difficult for a ship to recover the rocket booster.

President Joe Biden said Friday the Federal Emergency Management Agency had pre-positioned staff and supplies in the region.

“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.

Officials in Southern California were re-enforcing sand berms, built to protect low-lying coastal communitie­s against winter surf, like in Huntington Beach, which dubs itself as “Surf City USA.”

In nearby Newport Beach, Tanner Atkinson waited in a line of vehicles for free sandbags at a city distributi­on point.

“I mean a lot of people here are excited because the waves are gonna get pretty heavy,” Atkinson said. “But I mean, it’s gonna be some rain, so usually there’s some flooding and the landslides and things like that.”

About 100 people sought refuge at storm shelters in the twin resorts of Los Cabos, at the southern tip of the Baja peninsula, and firefighte­rs used an inflatable boat to rescue a family in San Jose del Cabo, after the resort was hit by driving rain and wind.

Some schools in Cabo San Lucas were being prepared as temporary shelters, and 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. Schools were shut down in five municipali­ties.

It was increasing­ly likely that Hilary would reach California on Sunday while still at tropical storm strength, though widespread rain was expected to begin as early as Saturday, the National Weather Service’s San Diego office said.

Hurricane officials said the storm could bring heavy rainfall to the southweste­rn United States, dumping 3 to 6 inches in places, with isolated amounts of up to 10 inches (25 centimeter­s), in portions of southern California and southern Nevada.

The region could face once-in-a-century rains and there is a good chance Nevada will break its alltime rainfall record, said meteorolog­ist Jeff Masters of Yale Climate Connection­s and a former government in-flight hurricane meteorolog­ist.

 ?? ALLEN J. SCHABEN Los Angeles Times ?? John Straub, left, a volunteer with West Orange County Community Emergency Response Team loads dozens of sandbags for local residents to fortify their homes ahead of anticipate­d high surf, strong winds and flooding from the approachin­g Hurricane Hilary in Seal Beach on Friday.
ALLEN J. SCHABEN Los Angeles Times John Straub, left, a volunteer with West Orange County Community Emergency Response Team loads dozens of sandbags for local residents to fortify their homes ahead of anticipate­d high surf, strong winds and flooding from the approachin­g Hurricane Hilary in Seal Beach on Friday.
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