Los Angeles Times

Rivers flood as north sees heavy rainfall

Storm brings record precipitat­ion to some parts of the state and prompts closure of Yosemite Valley.

- By Ben Poston ben.poston@latimes.com Twitter: @bposton Times staff writers Joseph Serna and Rong-Gong Lin II contribute­d to this report.

A powerful storm laden with tropical moisture dumped rain over Northern California, drenching the Bay Area and causing some flooding in Yosemite Valley and the Lake Tahoe area Saturday.

The Merced River reached flood stage at 8 a.m., according to the National Weather Service. The storm, which started Friday, dropped more than 3 inches of rain in Yosemite Valley, said Brian Ochs, a meteorolog­ist with the weather service in Hanford, Calif.

The Merced River at the Pohono Bridge — which was running at about 4 feet before the storm — hit 10 feet, which is when flooding occurs, Ochs said. The river was expected to rise to 15 feet by late Saturday, he said. The river flooded last spring amid warm weather.

Yosemite Valley remained closed by the National Park Service on Saturday because of the flooding. All overnight reservatio­ns were canceled through Saturday night. Officials said they would reassess the situation Sunday.

“There is some minor flooding in some of the campground­s,” Ochs said. “Unfortunat­ely it’s a loss of revenue for the park, but safety is the important thing.”

The main roads through the valley have been inundated with water, as has Housekeepi­ng Camp on the south bank of the Merced River, said meteorolog­ist Kris Mattarochi­a with the weather service.

Video taken Saturday showed water flooding a roadway near the Yosemite Valley visitor center.

The rain was expected to taper off Saturday afternoon, but the threat of mudslides in the Yosemite Valley remains due to recent wildfires, Ochs said.

The Truckee River also flooded early Saturday, according to the weather service.

The river reached its flood stage of 4.5 feet and was expected to crest at 5.7 feet Saturday afternoon, meteorolog­ist Courtney Obergfell said. The flooding was expected to affect campground­s, yards and basements of low-lying homes along the river, she said.

The “atmospheri­c river” storm — a long plume of water vapor pouring over from the Pacific Ocean — is loaded with warm tropical moisture that will accelerate snowmelt at some of the highest elevations along the northern and central Sierra Nevada.

San Francisco by early Saturday recorded 2.22 inches of rain since the previous night, ranking it as the second-highest one-day total ever in the month of April. Some locales to the north of the Bay Area recorded more than 6 inches of rain during the storm, according to the weather service.

Sacramento and Oroville broke daily records for rainfall Friday, and Santa Rosa saw 3.44 inches of rain from the storm. The storm forced a rare postponeme­nt of a game at San Francisco's AT&T Park on Friday, where the Giants had been set to host the Dodgers.

Officials with the California Department of Water Resources said they were closely monitoring how much water the storm sends into Lake Oroville, where a patched-up dam spillway may be used for the first time since last year.

At 2 p.m. Saturday, the lake level registered nearly 797 feet, well below the 901foot-level at which it would spill over. If the lake rises to 830 feet, DWR officials said they will open the spillway gates, releasing water in a more controlled manner.

Current forecasts show the potential for runoff to raise the reservoir to near the 830-foot trigger elevation by the middle of this week, the department said.

The spillway is the reservoir’s primary tool for flushing out massive amounts of water in a quick, controlled way. It crumbled last year, triggering evacuation­s downstream, and has been only partially rebuilt, with engineers patching up the rest earlier this year. The remainder

‘There is some minor flooding in some of the campground­s. Unfortunat­ely it’s a loss of revenue for the park, but safety is the important thing.’ —Brian Ochs meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service, on conditions at Yosemite Valley

of the spillway is to be torn down and rebuilt after the current rainy season has passed.

Water resource managers have kept the lake well below its usual levels for the last year to avoid using the spillway amid repairs. But a string of late-season storms in March pushed the lake’s level higher.

The storm did not bring much rain to Ventura County or Los Angeles on Saturday, with light precipitat­ion falling in the coastal mountains, according to the weather service.

Southern California appears poised to record one of the driest rain years on record, climatolog­ist Bill Patzert said. Downtown Los Angeles since July 1 has received about 4.68 inches of rain, about 34% of average for this point in the rain year.

 ?? Eric Paul Zamora Fresno Bee ?? KEVIN KIMO LAUGHLIN wades back to dry ground from the Merced River on Saturday.
Eric Paul Zamora Fresno Bee KEVIN KIMO LAUGHLIN wades back to dry ground from the Merced River on Saturday.

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