The Mercury News

Storm damage costs reach $120 million — and counting

Residents in affected areas told to remain patient

- By Dennis L Taylor dtaylor@ montereyhe­rald.com

Damage in Monterey County from the recent storms is likely to top $120 million, officials say.

At a recent workshop, Monterey County officials provided residents with the most comprehens­ive view to date of the damage that was caused by the atmospheri­c rivers and the subsequent flooding and landslides that hit the Central Coast from Dec. 26 to Jan. 16.

The storm affected the entire watersheds of the Salinas, Carmel, Pajaro, Arroyo Seco and Big Sur rivers, said Tracy Dolfino, the interim Office of Emergency Services manager. It still will be some time before the floodwater­s, especially the Salinas River, recede enough to get a better picture of the total damage.

California requested a presidenti­al emergency declaratio­n Jan. 8 that was granted the following day. Monterey, San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties were added to the federal disaster declaratio­n Jan. 19, enabling them to be eligible for federal assistance.

The damage was widespread, Dolfino said. The cost of emergency response, emergency repairs and in some places ruinous effects on the $11.7 billion agricultur­e industry were coupled with the damage cities and special districts suffered.

Randy Ishii, the county's director of public works, facilities and parks, outlined the number of road closures caused by flooding waters and landslides. The number varied from day to day but at any one time totaled a dozen or more. Some of the closures made it difficult for trucks trying to haul winter produce to market. The effects on agricultur­e were lessened somewhat because many of the Salinas Valley operations have moved to Yuma, Arizona, for the winter.

Debris flow from burn scars left from the 2020 River Fire in Salinas and the Carmel Fire were kept to a minimum since the hillsides have had two years to heal, with new vegetation that provided some degree of stability in the soil, Ishii said.

Other places were not so lucky.

Scenic Road along Carmel Point suffered what Ishii described as permanent damage from severe wave action and flows. Sewer lines were affected as well. It is one of the places in the county that will need financial and other types of support from state and federal sources to rebuild, if possible. Places along the roadway are now on the edge of a cliff.

Scenic Road in the affected area will remain closed to all cars, bicycles and pedestrian­s, Ishii said.

Another site where state and federal resources will be needed is a bridge that was inundated by the flooding Salinas River in Gonzales. A section of River Road along the bridge collapsed into floodwater­s. River levels will need to subside further before crews can get in to evaluate the damage.

A few miles north of Gonzales in the community of Chualar, a wastewater treatment plant was overtopped by flood waters from the Salinas River. As with the bridge in Gonzales, water levels will need to go down before crews can get an accurate picture of the damage. State and federal help will also be needed at that site.

Ishii asked that residents in the affected areas remain patient as crews — many of whom have been working 24 hours a day — evaluate and repair damaged areas.

Lew Bauman, the interim director of the Monterey County Water Resources Agency, said the storm was unique in that the Naciamento and San Antonio reservoirs in southern Monterey County were able to capture the water coming down from the nearby watersheds and did not have to release water into the already flooding Salinas River.

The river, which originates in the Los Padres National Forest in central San Luis Obispo County and then continues north 175 miles to the ocean, bypasses the reservoirs. But the lakes can release water into the river which then percolates into aquifers in the Salinas Valley Groundwate­r Basin. Most of the time, the river flows undergroun­d.

The water agency alone suffered more than $16 million in damages to roads connecting to pumping stations, water control facilities and levees. Damage to Naciamento occurred from debris flows slamming into various structures.

Along the Pajaro River separating Monterey and Santa Cruz counties, levees on the Monterey County side were badly damaged when they were overtopped. The Monterey County side is particular­ly vulnerable because the levies are nearly 2 feet lower than on the Santa Cruz side, Bauman said.

There is no indication yet of when or how much federal and state assistance will be provided to the county. Not surprising­ly, there was significan­t damage to Highway 1 along the Big Sur coast from landslides that has closed the highway in several places. Because it is a state highway, damage there will be a part of the massive Caltrans cleanup statewide.

 ?? MOLLY GIBBS — MONTEREY HERALD ?? Parts of Scenic Road by Carmel River State Beach collapsed due to damage from storms, which also took out the sewage line for six houses along Scenic Road.
MOLLY GIBBS — MONTEREY HERALD Parts of Scenic Road by Carmel River State Beach collapsed due to damage from storms, which also took out the sewage line for six houses along Scenic Road.

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