Times-Call (Longmont)

California hit with flooding, landslides as another atmospheri­c river departs

- By John Antczak

LOS ANGELES >> Southern California residents weary of a storm-soaked winter were hit Wednesday by parting shots from the season’s 11th atmospheri­c river, which flooded roadways, caused landslides and toppled trees throughout the state.

Water pooled on roadways in the region, rocks and mud littered others, and there were reports of potholes that disabled numerous cars. Flooding closed several miles of Pacific Coast Highway through Huntington Beach, south of Los Angeles on the Orange County coast.

Statewide, more than 168,000 utility customers remained without power early Wednesday, according to poweroutag­e.us.

California’s latest atmospheri­c river was one of two storm systems that bookended the U.S. this week. Parts of New England and New York were digging out of a nor’easter Wednesday that caused tens of thousands of power outages, numerous school cancellati­ons and whiteout conditions on roads.

Remaining showers across Southern California were expected to decrease through Wednesday evening as the storm headed toward parts of the Great Basin. The weather service said California will see minor precipitat­ion this weekend, followed by another substantia­l storm next week.

For downtown Los Angeles, the National Weather Service said just under 2 feet of rain were recorded so far this water year — making this the 14th wettest in more than 140 years of records.

An overnight mudslide onto a road in the Baldwin Hills area of Los Angeles County trapped two cars, KNBC-TV reported. Another hillside in the neighborho­od also gave way, threatenin­g the foundation of a hilltop home.

Statewide, about 27,000 people remained under evacuation orders and more than 61,000 were under warnings to be ready to evacuate due to weather impacts, according to the California Office of Emergency Services. Emergency shelters housed 676 people Tuesday night.

Weather in the northern and central sections of the state had dried out earlier, following Tuesday’s heavy rain and fierce winds that blew out windows on a San Francisco high-rise and gusted to 74 mph at the city’s airport.

Gov. Gavin Newsom issued emergency declaratio­ns for three more counties on Tuesday, raising the total to 43 of the state’s 58 counties.

Despite California’s rains winding down, flood warnings remain in effect on the central coast for the Salinas and Pajaro rivers in Monterey County and other rivers in the Central Valley as water runs off land that has been saturated by storms since late December.

Runoff from a powerful atmospheri­c river last week burst a levee on the Pajaro River, triggering evacuation­s as water flooded farmland and agricultur­al communitie­s. Nearly half of the people under evacuation orders were in Monterey County.

 ?? BRONTË WITTPENN — SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE VIA AP ?? Floodwater from a breached levee submerges cars and floods businesses on Salinas Road in Pajaro, Calif. on Tuesday. The levee failure prompted overnight evacuation­s March 10into the next day.
BRONTË WITTPENN — SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE VIA AP Floodwater from a breached levee submerges cars and floods businesses on Salinas Road in Pajaro, Calif. on Tuesday. The levee failure prompted overnight evacuation­s March 10into the next day.

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