Santa Fe New Mexican

Rain again pounds Calif.

- By Haven Daley and John Antczak

WATSONVILL­E, Calif. — The latest powerful atmospheri­c river to drench California put nearly 27,000 people under evacuation orders Tuesday due to flooding and landslide risks. On the central coast, workers hauled truckloads of rocks to plug a broken river levee amid steady rain and wind.

Damaging winds with gusts topping 70 mph blew out windows, and there were numerous reports of falling trees. Power outages hit more than 330,000 utility customers in northern and central areas, according to poweroutag­e.us, which tracks outages nationwide.

Crews raced to stabilize the Pajaro River’s ruptured levee Tuesday, placing rocks and boulders to finish filling the gap that opened late Friday, about 70 miles south of San Francisco. Workers will then raise that portion’s elevation to match the rest of the levee over the next few weeks to make it impermeabl­e, officials said.

Tuesday’s storm initially spread light to moderate rain over the state’s north and center. But the National Weather Service said the storm was moving faster than expected and most of the precipitat­ion would shift southward.

“Even a small amount of rain could potentiall­y have larger impacts,” Shaunna Murray of the Monterey County Water Resources Agency said Tuesday during a news conference.

Powerful winds damaged windows in a San Francisco highrise, causing glass to rain down and forcing evacuation­s from the building in the financial district. No injuries were immediatel­y reported.

A gust of 74 mph was recorded at the city’s airport, the weather service said.

So far this winter, California has been battered by 10 atmospheri­c rivers — long plumes of moisture from the Pacific Ocean — as well as powerful storms fueled by arctic air that produced blizzard conditions. On the East Coast, the start of a winter storm with heavy, wet snow caused a plane to slide off a runway and led to hundreds of school closings, canceled flights and thousands of power outages Tuesday.

Along the Southern California coast, evacuation orders began at 8 a.m. in Santa Barbara County for several areas burned by wildfires in recent years, creating increased risk of flash floods and debris flows.

The storm caused emergency declaratio­ns for 40 counties.

In addition to evacuation orders, more than 71,600 people were under evacuation warnings and 546 people were in shelters by Tuesday morning, said Brian Ferguson, spokespers­on for the California Office of Emergency Services. Updated figures were not immediatel­y available.

More flooding was expected on the central coast, where the Pajaro River swelled with runoff from last week’s atmospheri­c river. Authoritie­s had not received reports of any deaths or missing persons related to the storm as of Monday.

The levee breach grew to at least 400 feet since the failure late Friday, officials said. A roughly 20-foot gap remained Tuesday afternoon.

Pajaro, an unincorpor­ated community known for its strawberry crops, was largely flooded. More than 8,500 people were told to evacuate, and nearly 250 people have been rescued by first responders since Friday.

 ?? NOAH BERGER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pamela and Patrick Cerruti empty coins from Pajaro Coin Laundry as floodwater­s surround machines Tuesday in Pajaro in Monterey County, Calif. ‘We lost it all. That’s half a million dollars of equipment,’ said Pamela Cerruti, who added they plan to rebuild.
NOAH BERGER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pamela and Patrick Cerruti empty coins from Pajaro Coin Laundry as floodwater­s surround machines Tuesday in Pajaro in Monterey County, Calif. ‘We lost it all. That’s half a million dollars of equipment,’ said Pamela Cerruti, who added they plan to rebuild.

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