Los Angeles Times

Region’s rainfall produces ‘May gray on steroids’

Storms bring cooler temps, precipitat­ion — and more to come.

- By Christine Mai-Duc

Pay no mind to the fact that Memorial Day is around the corner — winter is here again.

Across California, yet another May storm on Sunday brought cool temperatur­es and rainfall throughout Southern California, hail in the Bay Area and even snow in the Sierra.

“This is May gray on steroids,” said Bill Patzert, a weather expert and former climatolog­ist with Jet Propulsion Laboratory. “Usually by this time of year, we’re done, but this meandering jet stream has been persistent through the spring, and it’s given us four times our normal rainfall.”

Much of the state is seeing two to five times more precipitat­ion than is normal for this point in May, according to the National Weather Service’s river forecast center for California and Nevada.

Patzert notes, however, that in many areas of Southern California that amounts to less than an inch of precipitat­ion for the month.

But the storm also comes after an exceptiona­lly wet winter, an unusually rainy May and another record-setting storm last week.

“What we’re seeing right now, it’s like the whipped cream on the sundae,” Patzert said.

While this year’s rare wet winter lifted California out of the drought for the first time in years, Southern California’s groundwate­r basins, which were depleted during the dry years, will still take years to refill.

“If anyone’s complainin­g here, I’m definitely deaf,” Patzert said. “Anyone who thinks we’re out of the drought is what I call drought delusional.”

Downtown Los Angeles typically gets about a quarter of an inch of rainfall for the entire month of May. As of 9 a.m. Sunday, the area had received 0.2 inch of rain in the previous 24 hours.

“If we had gotten this in March, it would have been a typical garden-variety storm,” said Lisa Phillips, a meteorolog­ist at the National Weather Service in Oxnard. “It’s different because it’s happening now.”

Scattered showers are expected throughout the L.A. region into Sunday evening, according to the National Weather Service, though “a rogue thundersto­rm can’t be ruled out.”

The rain should taper off Monday, which will bring lower-than-normal temperatur­es, before a new, weaker storm system moves in Tuesday.

Much of that rain will probably stay north of the Los Angeles area, Phillips said, with a slightly higher chance of showers late in the evening.

L.A. County public health officials have extended a beach advisory, cautioning people to avoid swimming and surfing at county beaches until at least 8:30 a.m. Wednesday. Expect cool temperatur­es well into next week.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? FLO CHAPGIER, left, and Yolanda Bergman take cover as they chat with Laurie La Shelle during an evacuation drill in Mandeville Canyon on Sunday.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times FLO CHAPGIER, left, and Yolanda Bergman take cover as they chat with Laurie La Shelle during an evacuation drill in Mandeville Canyon on Sunday.

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