Many thanks to the Extinction Protocol
Third
storm in five days wreaks havoc on U.S. West Coast
Blasting
out of the Pacific, the third and most powerful "Pineapple
Express" storm of the week swept over the Bay Area Sunday
morning, dumping heavy rain on a region already soaked to the roots
and reeling from power outages and flooding.
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December, 2012
"It's
a mess," said CHP Officer James Evans. "We've got flooding
everywhere."
The
triple whammy toppled trees and power lines, snarled traffic, caused
accidents on slippery roadways and cut electrical power to about
297,000 customers in the region, including BART riders who were
stranded on subway cars during a harrowing, one-hour outage early
Sunday morning.
Measured
by rainfall and wind, this was one of the most powerful storm events
since October 2009, said Jan
Null,
a meteorologist with the Golden Gate Weather Services. Pineapple
Express is a term for warm weather fronts that start in the southwest
Pacific and head toward California. This one started north of Hawaii,
Null said.
"It
was a pretty significant series of storms," he said. The storms
actually swept through over a five-day period from Wednesday to
Sunday, allowing some time for drowning areas to drain out. "If
we had no breaks, it could have been worse."
After
the first two storms saturated Bay Area flatlands and hillsides late
last week, the National Weather Service issued flash-flood warnings
over the weekend for Santa Cruz and Santa Clara counties, including
Ben Lomond and Boulder Creek, after as much as one inch of rain per
hour fell in the area.
And
some of those predictions came true: On Sunday morning, authorities
in Santa Cruz reported trees into power lines at several spots
throughout the county. There were also two rock slides on Highway 17
-- the narrow, winding connecting road between San Jose and Santa
Cruz.
The
first slide was near Sugar Loaf Road and the second was reported at
Glenwood Cutoff. Both required work but no major problems resulted.
Although
the Santa Cruz Mountains saw the
most heavy rainfall, no part of the Bay Area was spared from the
storms and the treacherous driving conditions they created.
Wild
winds
BART
trains stopped running around 9:18 a.m. after a power outage at its
main control center, said Bart police Lt. Randy Gregson. At that
point, the transit agency could not communicate with or track its
trains. Service resumed about an hour later but it was not clear what
knocked out the power or why the backup system did not kick in.
Service was knocked out again about 2 p.m. but restored within about
15 minutes, BART officials said.
At
about the same time as the BART outage, three firefighters and a
motorist they were helping on Highway 24 in Orinda were seriously
injured when another driver lost control in the rain, slammed into a
parked fire engine and rolled into the victims.
Paramedics
took the firefighters to John Muir Hospital in Walnut Creek, where
they were in serious but stable condition, according to the
Moraga-Orinda Fire District. Two of the firefighters will require
surgery. The motorist they were helping suffered critical injuries.
In
Palo Alto, Oregon Expressway was closed because of flooding at the
Alma Street underpass. But the deluge spared areas of the city that
flooded in February 1998, the last big El NiƱo year. While water
levels in the four creeks passing through the city rose steadily
Sunday morning, none -- including the narrow channel of San
Francisquito Creek under the Chaucer Street bridge -- reached flood
stage. However, residents in South Palo Alto braved cascading rain to
rake mountains of leaves clogging storm drains. Ponds of water partly
covered several streets and parking lots.
The
third storm blew a big rig off its wheels in the eastbound lanes of
the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge. Winds may also have contributed to a
fatal crash involving three cars on northbound Interstate 280 in Daly
City. Authorities have identified the woman killed as 27-year-old
Lauren Delos Reyes of Daly City.
In
San Francisco, water reportedly flooded the tracks at Muni's Church
Street station about 8:40 a.m. Sunday, and riders were shuttled from
West Portal to Embarcadero until about 1 p.m. while water was pumped
from the station.
Some
good news
PG&E,
the main supplier of electricity in the area, reported that power had
been restored to 96 percent of those affected since Wednesday. By
Sunday night, about 20,900 customers, including 4,220 in the Bay
Area, still had no power. The utility said it had 2,000 emergency
workers in the field, but their work was slowed by rain blowing
sideways into their faces and equipment. All power is expected to be
restored Monday, according to PG&E.
The
good news for a region officially still in a drought is that rainfall
nudged slightly above average for the season that started July 1. For
example, San Jose has had 3.91 inches of rain, which is above its
average of 2.93 inches, said National Weather Service forecaster
Diana Henderson. San Francisco has had a whopping 7.92 inches
compared to an average of 4.68 inches.
For
Monday, the National Weather Service station in Monterey forecast
partly cloudy skies for most of the Bay Area, with light winds and
daytime temperatures in the lower 60s.
The
rest of the week should bring mostly cloudy skies and a chance of
rain, but nothing like the triple-storm that just passed. The skies
should clear up next weekend but high temperatures should remain in
the mid-60s and drop into the upper 40s at night.
Erratic
swings of jet stream leaves southern U.S. baking in record December
heat
High
temperatures in the Austin area have already broken records during
December, after November also brought record high temperatures and,
for the first time in decades, no rain in Austin for the entire
month.
3
December, 2012
Austin
saw no measurable rainfall in November, according to reports compiled
on the Austin-Bergstrom Airport Area by the National Weather Service
Southern Region Headquarters. According to the report, this is the
first year Austin has had only trace amounts of rainfall in the month
of November since 1970, more than four decades ago.
Record
highs were set on Nov. 1 at 88 degrees and Nov. 3 at 87 degrees. High
temperatures reached into the 80s on 15 days in November, and lows
never reached freezing. The most days it has reached 80 degrees in
the area in November was in 1931, with 17 days in the 80s.
Temperatures
Saturday hit 83 degrees, breaking the daily record of 82 degrees set
in 1954. The high reached 80 degrees Sunday, and is forecast to hit
83 degrees Monday. Previous December highs were 84 degrees Dec 2.
2007 and 86 degrees Dec. 3 1995.
As
of the end of November, the Austin area and 81 percent of the state
was in a drought classified as moderate or worse, the second of five
classifications for drought severity, according to the U.S. Drought
Monitor. 54 percent of the state was in a drought classified as
severe or worse, 25 percent was classified as extreme or worse and 8
percent was classified as exceptional.
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