Porterville Recorder

Yosemite reopens after flooding

- STAFF AND WIRE REPORT

Yosemite National Park reopened Sunday after flooding that washed out roads during a strong Pacific storm, park officials said.

Forecaster­s said up to 6 inches of rain fell over two days as rivers swelled in Northern California.

While the northern half of the state was hit by the brunt storm, the southern half of the Central Valley saw a little more thant a tenth of a inch of rain — Portervill­e had .13, Visalia had .17 and Tulare had .10. For the season, the station at the Portervill­e Airport has recorded 3.80 inches of rain, well below the 8.89 average.

Roads within Yosemite Valley were swamped by up to 4 feet of water that affected electrical and water systems. Most facilities reopened at midday, but officials warned that traffic could be slow as cleanup work continues.

The area was closed Friday as a powerful “Pineapple Express” storm moved through. The heaviest rain was in the northern Sierra and in coastal counties from San Francisco north to Mendocino during a 48hour period ending Saturday afternoon.

Flooding was also reported along the Truckee River near Lake Tahoe.

Further north, water flows into Lake Oroville following the deluge were not enough to re-

quire opening the partially rebuilt spillway at the troubled dam there, officials said.

The lake level stayed below 800 feet and inflows were tapering off, the California Department of Water Resources said. Officials said last week they would use the main spillway if the water level reaches 830 feet — but they hoped to avoid it.

The spillway was destroyed last year during a crisis that forced the evacuation of downstream towns amid fears of catastroph­ic flooding. About a third of it has been fully rebuilt with reinforced structural concrete but the rest has temporary repairs.

State officials said it’s safe to use if needed.

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