Los Angeles Times

Storm leaves swollen rivers, rockslides, huge headaches

- By Ruben Vives, Susanne Rust, Terry Castleman and Hayley Smith

PAJARO, Calif. — Surging rivers. Sliding rocks. Flooded towns.

The 11th atmospheri­c river storm of the season left a trail of soggy misery in California as it broke decadesold rainfall records and breached levees this week.

In the Tulare County city of Portervill­e, residents on both sides of the Tule River were ordered to evacuate Wednesday morning as levels rose at Lake Success, sending water running over the spillway at Schafer Dam.

“Right now the dam is in good working order — there’s no threat to the structure of the dam — but we have significan­t water coming off of the spillway,” said Carrie Monteiro, a spokeswoma­n for the Tulare County Emergency Operations Center.

Lake Success saw a significan­t increase in inflows overnight, peaking at nearly 19,800 cubic feet of water rushing in per second Wednesday morning, according to state data. Visalia and Portervill­e have declared a state of emergency.

The increased flow from the spillway is adding more water to the river and tributarie­s below, both of which are already full from the last storm, Monteiro said, adding that there is “flood concern.”

Water was about six inches from the bottom of one of the bridges on the Tule River; nearby, bulldozers were clearing debris and piling dirt mounds in an effort to protect a neighborho­od from potential flooding.

Johanna Morales, 32, was away Wednesday morning when the Tule River flooded her home.

Her landlord called around 11 a.m. with the news. Many of her valuables couldn’t be saved, she said: “It was too late.”

But on Wednesday evening, she and other family members came to salvage belongings. Morales waded through waist-high water holding plastic trash bags filled with her possession­s. And when she stopped to consider what came next, she broke into tears. For now, she said, they were just saving what they could.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said the devastatio­n across the state was indicative of extreme weather swings driven by climate change.

“You look back at the last few years in this state — it’s been fire to ice, and no warm bath in between,” he said during a news briefing Wednesday in Pajaro, the Monterey County town flooded by a levee breach last week. “If anyone has any doubt about Mother Nature and her fury — if anyone has any doubt about what this is all about in terms of what’s happening to the climate and the changes that we’re experienci­ng — come to the state of California.”

Storm clouds were beginning to clear Wednesday, though many effects are expected to linger.

More than 150,000 people remained without power statewide, many in the San Francisco Bay Area, where classes were canceled at more than a dozen schools in Cupertino.

In San Clemente, four apartment buildings were evacuated after mud, rocks and debris tumbled down a hillside behind the buildings, the Orange County Fire Authority said. No injuries were reported, but the trail below the properties as well as a portion of Buena Vista along the shore were closed.

In the Los Angeles area, a debris flow in Baldwin Hills trapped several cars overnight. On Wednesday morning, as many as 30 vehicles were disabled by about five large potholes on the 71 Freeway near Pomona, according to the California Highway Patrol.

Multiple rainfall records for the date were set by large margins Tuesday, including 2.54 inches in Santa Barbara, breaking a record of 1.36 inches set in 1952, and 2.25 inches in Oxnard, beating 1930’s mark of 1.46 inches. Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport saw 1.97 inches, smashing a record of 0.43 of an inch set in 1982.

In the San Bernardino Mountains, heavy rain melted dense snowpack and sent torrents of water rushing down streets. As much as 4.3 inches of rain fell on the mountain slopes during the last storm, according to the National Weather Service, but officials said there weren’t any major issues from the rains.

In Sacramento, reports of surfers and kayakers on the surging American River prompted warnings from the county.

The Fresno Fire Department responded to an apartment complex where a very large tree had toppled onto the building, displacing at least five adults and five children, said spokesman Jonathan Lopez-Galvan.

Perhaps the most lasting effect of the storm will be in the flooded community of Pajaro. A levee breach on the Pajaro River late Friday sent floodwater­s rushing into the migrant town of about 3,000 people, prompting widespread evacuation­s and cutting off potable water to the area.

It is likely that some people will never be able to return to their homes, county spokesman Nicholas Pasculli said.

State and county officials were working to stabilize the breach, but there was no timeline for when it will be fixed.

Officials knew for decades that the levee was vulnerable to failure but never prioritize­d repairs because they believed it did not make financial sense to protect the low-income area, a Times report found this week.

On Wednesday, California Sen. Alex Padilla grilled Shalanda Young, director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, about the Army Corps of Engineers’ policy.

“We need to address how the Army Corps, as well as OMB, should be thinking beyond just the benefit-cost ratio in order to ensure we’re protecting vulnerable communitie­s equitably,” Padilla said. “How can we shift the federal government’s approach to ensure that communitie­s like Pajaro and Watsonvill­e receive the resources they need before it’s too late?”

Young committed to working with Congress to ensure lasting changes “because there’s never enough money even with the infrastruc­ture law,” she said.

A project to improve the Pajaro River levee system is anticipate­d to go to constructi­on in 2024, and has so far received $67 million from President Biden’s $1.2-trillion infrastruc­ture bill signed in 2021. That is the first in a series of federal investment­s.

The total project is expected to cost more than $400 million. Roughly 65% will be paid by the federal government, and the remainder by the state.

“Lots of communitie­s have flood control projects that we can’t get to,” Young said. “But this idea that poor communitie­s don’t deserve the same flood control protection as those with higher value and houses is just patently unfair.”

Speaking from Pajaro on Wednesday, Newsom said he was “committed to this community” and spoke critically of the fact that the levee — which has flooded several times since its constructi­on in 1949 — wasn’t fixed decades ago.

In addition to federal funds, he said he has committed nearly $140 million in state funds to match project costs and help fix the levee. However, the process could take five to seven years to complete.

“We’ve got to change the way the federal government scores these projects to prioritize those communitie­s that are most vulnerable, period, full stop,” he said.

He added that the United Way had secured $42 million from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e to assist farmworker­s affected by flooding in the region and will begin sending $600 checks immediatel­y, regardless of recipients’ immigratio­n status.

Officials on Wednesday were also keeping a close eye on the nearby Salinas River, which remained swollen at the communitie­s of Bradley and Spreckels on Wednesday morning.

Though the rains have mostly stopped, additional rises in the rivers are expected due to runoff, said Jeff Lorber, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in the Bay Area. “It’s still very saturated, the soil, so moisture that’s pooled up in the mountains will take a while to filter down into the valleys.”

In Southern California, officials were similarly eyeing Conejo Creek in Camarillo, which peaked Wednesday morning and spurred a flood warning.

Officials in Santa Barbara County reported that the storm had created a waterfall in Tucker’s Grove Park, noting that the “flowing water will find its way to San Antonio Creek and eventually drain into the ocean.”

In Orange County, Supervisor Katrina Foley declared a local state of emergency on Tuesday to support storm responses in the area, prompted in part by a hillside collapse in Newport Beach that threatened some homes and sent a chunk of bluff tumbling down.

“My hope is that there is no further sliding on the shore, but if these three homes fall, a cascading effect may happen to the 50 other homes on the bluff and we must be prepared in case that happens,” Foley said in a statement.

Newsom expanded his state of emergency Tuesday night to include Orange, Alpine and Trinity counties, meaning 43 of California’s 58 counties are now covered by the declaratio­n. More than 30 flood watches and warnings are in effect from the National Weather Service.

Forecaster­s said rain should taper off in most areas by Wednesday afternoon. However, another atmospheri­c river is likely to hit the state next week.

 ?? Photograph­s by Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? AN EXASPERATE­D Irineo Zaragoza and his wife, Veronica, try to salvage items from their flooded home Wednesday in Woodlake, Calif., in Tulare County. Tuesday’s storm set multiple rainfall records.
Photograph­s by Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times AN EXASPERATE­D Irineo Zaragoza and his wife, Veronica, try to salvage items from their flooded home Wednesday in Woodlake, Calif., in Tulare County. Tuesday’s storm set multiple rainfall records.
 ?? ?? WOODLAKE’S Hillside Estates area is flooded Wednesday after the previous night’s heavy rain. Statewide, thousands remain without power.
WOODLAKE’S Hillside Estates area is flooded Wednesday after the previous night’s heavy rain. Statewide, thousands remain without power.
 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? AN ORCHARD worker in Portervill­e walks down a f looded Avenue 216 to clear storm drains as a Tulare County sheriff’s vehicle patrols the street calling for mandatory evacuation­s after the storm.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times AN ORCHARD worker in Portervill­e walks down a f looded Avenue 216 to clear storm drains as a Tulare County sheriff’s vehicle patrols the street calling for mandatory evacuation­s after the storm.

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