Los Angeles Times

State braces for late December rainfall

‘Calm before storm’ arrives in L.A. with precipitat­ion expected as early as Sunday.

- By Grace Toohey

Increased rainfall, with a growing chance for heavy precipitat­ion over Christmas, is expected across much of California, beginning next week and lasting through the rest of December.

A southward shift in the jet stream is directing a string of storms toward the state — the first clear sign of the long-projected strong El Niño winter — with rain arriving in the Los Angeles area as early as Sunday.

“The jet stream is just the highway of storms,” said David Sweet, a National Weather Service meteorolog­ist in Oxnard. “As that jet stream sags further and further south, we start seeing more frequent chances of rain.”

For the rest of this week, however, National Weather Service forecaster­s in Southern California characteri­zed the next few days as “the literal calm before the storm.”

Through Saturday, the Southland is expected to remain dry and slightly warmer, with highs reaching into the 70s, until the first low-pressure system moves down the West Coast.

That storm system will bring a chance of rain for much of California beginning Sunday, with the northern half of the state expecting precipitat­ion slightly earlier, and Central and Southern California seeing most rainfall Monday through Wednesday, forecasts show. By Wednesday, another wet, low-pressure system could move in from the Gulf of Alaska. Sweet said that second storm is looking stronger and “could drop significan­t rain toward the end of the week.”

But he cautioned that there’s “still a lot of doubt because that’s anywhere from one to two weeks out.”

“But some people are hopeful — if you like rain, that is,” Sweet said.

That rainfall pattern is likely to stick around until the end of the month — and probably longer, with forecaster­s predicting a “historical­ly strong” El Niño, which tends to bring a wetter-thanaverag­e winter to the West Coast. Its effects are usually most pronounced in the second half of California’s traditiona­l rainy season, between January and March, Sweet said.

“Each El Niño is different. ... Normally with an El Niño, especially a strong one, we tend to get a subtropica­l jet stream that moves across the state,” said Anthony Artusa, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center. “This seems to be the pattern that is setting up.”

Long-range forecaster­s are predicting a moderate chance of heavy precipitat­ion across coastal California south of San Francisco beginning Dec. 25 through Dec. 27, according to the latest hazards outlook from the Climate Prediction Center. That same forecast is also predicting a moderate chance for heavy snow across the Sierra Nevada at the same time.

“We’re expecting a wet Christmas,” Artusa said. “We’re expecting above normal precipitat­ion for California . ... The better chances are down in the southern half of the state.”

He said coastal California­n south of San Francisco can expect up to 2 inches of rain from Dec. 22-28, with the possibilit­y of some heavier bouts of rain locally. The Sierra could see up to 2 feet of a heavy snow, he said, and the storms are also expected to bring winds around 20 mph, with some gusts up to 40 mph.

“Around Christmas and in the days after that, assume there’s going to be some transporta­tion issues,” Artusa said. “Be aware of potentiall­y heavy rain in the lower elevations near the coasts, potential snow in the Sierra ... and the possibilit­y of some stronger winds.”

Models are showing an “upcoming wet pattern across essentiall­y all of [California] that will likely last at least two weeks,” Daniel Swain, a UCLA climatolog­ist, wrote in a post on X, formerly Twitter. “Storms will start out very warm, with high snow levels, before becoming somewhat colder later in the sequence.”

He said this pattern aligns with what many weather experts predicted for El Niño: a wet winter following a drier autumn.

Swain said some forecasts “show heavy rainfall in some parts of [California] that could produce hydrologic concerns/flooding at times,” but noted that details remain uncertain this far out.

The latest precipitat­ion outlooks from the national Climate Prediction Center continue to show an aboveavera­ge chance for precipitat­ion across much of South and Central California over the last two weeks of December. From Dec. 21-27, there is a significan­t chance for rainfall, while temperatur­es are expected to remain slightly above average. The threemonth outlook through February is forecastin­g an above-average chance for rainfall statewide.

But the pattern of storms won’t start out too strong, with the first system bringing only light rain to the Southland through Wednesday.

“Sunday afternoon is when we expect our first very slight chance of rain,” Sweet said, hovering at around a 20% chance. He said no more than a quarter of an inch of rain is expected in the L.A. area.

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