Rose Garden Resident

High winds, heavy rains wreak havoc throughout Bay Area

- By Will Mccarthy and Grace Hase

From hurricane force winds along the California coast to the small chance of a tornado touching down in parts of the Bay Area, the National Weather Service sounded some unusual alarms for the region on Sunday as an atmospheri­c river ripped through a large swath of the state.

While the rain and flooding wasn't as severe as predicted, the high winds and heavy rains downed trees and power lines, causing road closures and power outages for tens of thousands of Bay Area residents.

“The winds are the main hazard with this system,” said Sarah Mccorkle, a meteorolog­ist with the National

Weather Service. “They're shaping up to be pretty bad.”

The National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center warned of the slight possibilit­y of a tornado on Sunday afternoon somewhere between San Francisco and Monterey.

The winds caused massive delays at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport, averaging more than four hours by early afternoon. By 2:30 p.m., 155 flights leaving SFO were delayed and 69 had been canceled, according to the tracking website Flightawar­e. Mineta San Jose Internatio­nal Airport also saw impacts with 26 flights delayed and 14 canceled.

In San Jose, an enormous tree fell on a townhome on Rocky Creek Court, crushing the garage, and ferocious winds wreaked havoc

downtown. In Alameda, a firefighte­rs and the Coast Guard responded to a boat in distress of the island's shore. In Monterey, wind gusts as

high as 92 mph were recorded.

As of 1 p.m., PG&E said more than 70,000 customers had their power knocked out, with 22,411 without power in the South Bay, 23,607 in the North Bay and 17,949 in the East Bay. The Peninsula and San Francisco were impacted in a lesser extent with 5,965 and 497 customers without power, respective­ly.

The heaviest bands of rain fell along the coast, from Mt. Tamalpais to the Santa Cruz mountains. Downtown San Jose, by Sunday morning saw only 0.67 inches of rain, whereas upwards of 4 inches fell in the Big Sur region.

Water levels on the Guadalupe River through San Jose was expected to peak at 11 feet, nearly two feet above flood stage. Instead, by 2 p.m the river was only at 7 feet and beginning to decline.

Residents from San Jose to the Monterey coast were warned to hunker down on

Saturday. San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan declared a local state of emergency and warned unhoused people living along the Guadalupe River to evacuate. In Monterey County, evacuation­s were ordered for residents along parts of the Carmel River and in a Salinas neighborho­od. The National Weather Service's Monterey office issued its first ever hurricane force wind for the central coast.

While rain and some strong winds were still expected overnight, National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Crystal Oudit said the forecast would start to improve this past Monday, though Bay Area residents were to expect more rain.

“Things kind of get back to status quo on Tuesday,” Oudit said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ARIC CRABB — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? A crew works to remove sections of a large tree that fell onto a housing unit along Rocky Creek Court in San Jose on Sunday. The storm in the Bay Area, though not as harsh as predicted, caused damage, power outages and road closures in some areas.
PHOTOS BY ARIC CRABB — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER A crew works to remove sections of a large tree that fell onto a housing unit along Rocky Creek Court in San Jose on Sunday. The storm in the Bay Area, though not as harsh as predicted, caused damage, power outages and road closures in some areas.

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