San Francisco Chronicle

Wet morning commute likely — another storm Wednesday

- By Jenna Lyons

A storm brought rain to San Francisco and snow to the Sierra on Sunday night, providing some relief from a winter that so far has been drier than normal.

A cold front moving south to the Bay Area from Seattle reached San Francisco by midevening, bringing showers as temperatur­es stayed in the mid-50s, said Drew Peterson, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Monterey.

In the Sierra, elevations above 6,000 feet could receive up to 4 inches of snow, according to Mark Faucette, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Reno.

San Francisco and Oakland were expected to receive between a quarter inch and a half inch of rain by Monday morning.

San Francisco has recorded 7.68 inches of rain this season, while the average amount is 11.75

inches, Peterson said.

The current rain total is 65 percent of normal precipitat­ion totals for the time of year. Throughout the region, areas range from 55 to 70 percent of normal, Peterson said. “It’s been a drier than normal year so far,” he said.

The storm should bring slightly more rain to the North Bay, where regions such as Santa Rosa could receive as much as 1.25 inches of rain, Peterson said. The South Bay could record up to two-tenths of an inch.

“The worst of it’s going to

“The worst of it’s going to be overnight. However, it will probably still be a wet commute.” Drew Peterson, meteorolog­ist, National Weather Service in Monterey

be overnight,” Peterson said. “However, it will probably still be a wet commute” Monday.

Residents should expect more rain Wednesday as another, probably wetter storm approaches the region, he said. That system could bring 10 to 18 inches of snow for elevations above 7,000 feet in the Sierra, Faucette said, with 6 to 9 inches of snow expected near lake level in Tahoe.

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