San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Calif. mountain areas get a white Christmas

- By Stefanie Dazio

LOS ANGELES — Parts of California are getting a white Christmas after all, with snowfall pounding mountains across the state.

Other areas of California, however, saw a wet and rainy Christmas, with storms continuing to drench the state, causing flash flooding and evacuation­s in some areas over the holiday period.

At Donner Pass in the Sierra Nevada, officials with the University of California, Berkeley’s Central Sierra Snow Laboratory wondered on Twitter if the recent snowfall could break the snowiest December record of 179 inches set in 1970.

There’s been at least 119 inches recorded so far this month, according to the Mercury News, with more expected over the next 72 hours.

The snowpack in the Sierra was at dangerousl­y low levels after recent weeks of dry weather, but the state Department of Water Resources reported on Christmas Eve that the snowpack was between 114 percent and 137 percent of normal across the range with more snow expected.

In the San Bernardino National Forest, crews were working on a $4.2 million emergency project to repair a section of State Route 18 that washed down a hillside late Thursday after heavy rain, according to the San Bernardino Sun.

The roadway is a major route to Big Bear Lake, and the closure near Panorama Point could be “several days if not weeks,” the newspaper reported.

The Los Angeles area is likely to see rain and mountain snow for the next week, according to the National Weather Service, with temperatur­es significan­tly below normal through the middle of the week.

The San Diego region should see scattered showers, with heavy snow in the San Bernardino and Riverside County mountains, with precipitat­ion possibly going into Thursday.

Meanwhile, the San Francisco Bay Area is predicted to have rain showers through Monday before cold and drier conditions arrive through the middle of next week, the weather service said.

The storms across the West, which could drop rain and snow over much of the region into next week and plunge the Pacific Northwest into a lengthy cold snap, follow a now-departed atmospheri­c river that delivered copious amounts of precipitat­ion earlier this week.

Rain and snow records broke in Nevada, and state officials in Oregon declared an emergency ahead of the freezing temperatur­es, snow and ice.

Recent forecasts show at least an inch of snow is likely to fall Sunday in the Seattle and Portland regions, which don’t typically see snow.

But forecaster­s and state officials say the main concern is cold temperatur­es in the region, with daytime highs next week struggling to reach above freezing, that are likely to impact people experienci­ng homelessne­ss and those without adequate access to heating.

 ?? Caltrans / Associated Press ?? Traffic comes to a standstill along a snow-covered Interstate 80 on Thursday at Donner Summit, Calif. Recent snowfall is inching the state closer to the December record of 179 inches set in 1970.
Caltrans / Associated Press Traffic comes to a standstill along a snow-covered Interstate 80 on Thursday at Donner Summit, Calif. Recent snowfall is inching the state closer to the December record of 179 inches set in 1970.

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