Los Angeles Times

High heat marches on

Temperatur­es this weekend will likely hit 90 degrees as region’s rainy season ends.

- By Howard Blume howard.blume @latimes.com

Temperatur­es are expected to heat up again toward the end of the week, signaling a dry, disappoint­ing and foreboding end to the region’s rainy season as four years of low precipitat­ion continue.

After several days of near-seasonal weather early in the week — with highs in the low- to mid-70s — the winds will turn offshore, allowing dry, hot conditions to press toward the coast and push temperatur­es to nearrecord levels, about 15 to 20 degrees above normal, forecaster­s said.

By Friday, the high will probably edge over 90 degrees in downtown Los Angeles, said David Sweet, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Oxnard.

“This is only March,” he said. “This is pretty early for temperatur­es up around 90.... We’re really running out of time when it comes to the rainy season.”

The rainiest months in Southern California are December through March. Since Oct. 1, downtown L.A. has recorded 7.4 inches. About 12.8 inches would be considered normal. The total in March has been a paltry 0.87-inch.

No relief is in sight, said Bill Patzert, a climatolog­ist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

“Let’s get right down to it: We’re done. By April, usually, rainfall drops off dramatical­ly,” Patzert said. Just as importantl­y, the state’s snowpack, a source of runoff that fills reservoirs, has continued to shrink. “Nothing got better this year,” he said. Record-breaking warmth up and down the state “decimated the snowpack.”

The dry outlook spurred state officials to brainstorm a potential response. On Thursday, Gov. Jerry Brown and top lawmakers from both parties unveiled a plan that would spend more than $1 billion to improve the state’s water infrastruc­ture, provide emergency assistance to struggling communitie­s and protect wildlife.

“This is a struggle,” Brown said during a Capitol news conference. “Something we’re going to have to live with. For how long, we’re not sure.”

Brown stopped short of calling for mandatory water rationing, although he declined to rule it out.

Also last week, the state water board tightened restrictio­ns, advising urban agencies to limit days residents can water their yards.

Responses at local levels have varied, according to the Assn. of California Water Agencies.

Long Beach allows landscape watering on Mondays or Thursdays. Restaurant­s serve water on request. Residents washing cars can’t leave a hose running while they soap their vehicles. And they can’t hose off paved surfaces.

L.A. allows outdoor watering three days a week, alternatin­g between odd and even addresses.

Central Valley water districts have sharply reduced water allotments to farmers.

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin
Los Angeles Times ?? AT UCLA’S Drake Stadium, McKenzie Satterthwa­ite of Santa Monica runs the stairs. Temperatur­es are expected to near record levels by the end of the week.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times AT UCLA’S Drake Stadium, McKenzie Satterthwa­ite of Santa Monica runs the stairs. Temperatur­es are expected to near record levels by the end of the week.

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