California Rainstorms Bring Flooding, Mudslides It’s been a tough water year for California. We’ve talked about the drought pretty extensively here on the blog, as well as some surprising effects it has had, like increasing rattlesnake populations in residential areas—in addition to the expected effects, like increasing food costs, more frequent and damaging wildfires (see here and here), and skyrocketing prices at water auctions. California started getting much-needed water last week, but it’s coming in a series of downpours that have flooded streets, caused mudslides that overtook homes and stranded motorists on the Pacific Coast Highway (a portion of the PCH is even shut down completely for 3-4 weeks because of the damage), and temporarily cut power to around 100,000 customers in the Bay Area. There was even a small tornado in south L.A. that blew the roof off one home. Just this month (1st-15th) it has rained 9.14 inches in San Francisco—compared to 2.08 inches that fell in almost six months last year (July 1 to Dec 15th). The ground just can’t absorb the water at the rate it’s falling, which leads to the mudslides and severe flooding that happened this week. Evacuations have taken place in several Southern California communities, and more will happen if the rain continues at these rates. A heavy storm is expected to come into Southern California Tuesday afternoon, leading to concern over more possible mudslides and flood damage. Northern California can expect rain and snow until Wednesday. Many California residents are unprepared for power outages, evacuations, and flooding—while others are ready, having prepared in advance for just these types of emergencies, with survival kits, family evacuation plans, and emergency gear they can rely on during the storms. Instagram user @annettecardwell posted this photo on December 10th with the caption “House is sand bagged, hatches are battened, fireplace is roaring. Ready for #hellastorm”
House is sand bagged, hatches are battened, fireplace is roaring. Ready for #hellastorm A photo posted by Annette Cardwell (@annettecardwell) on
Google brought their sense of humor—and a raft—along for the ride… because you never know. Twitter user @dwnydaisy seemed all set to go the day the storms hit. Unfortunately, there were also a lot of messages like this one from Twitter user @krisellelaran, who thinks Californians aren’t well prepared. Some California residents even had to evacuate because the storm downed power lines onto their homes. Being prepared doesn't always mean you get to stay home, or that there isn't damage to your property, but it does mean there’s less to worry about in a crisis. To prepare for heavy storms that cause power outages and evacuations:
  • Get an emergency kit for everyone in your household.
  • Buy or build a power outage kit for your home—you’ll appreciate having it during short outages where you get to stay home, as well as serious storms that require evacuation.
  • Develop a household or family emergency and evacuation plan.
  • Build up a supply of food storage and water storage you can rely on in long-term emergencies as well as short-term crises that last just a few days or weeks.
  • Research and develop important skills you can rely on for communication or survival.
Prepare in advance, and you'll be ready for the next #rainpocalyspe or #hellastorm that comes your way. --Sarah Sources: http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/waterlogged-northern-california-rain-27626164 http://www.foxnews.com/weather/2014/12/13/pineapple-express-storm-system-pounds-california/ http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-first-storm-of-three-southern-california-20141216-story.html http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-portion-of-pch-to-be-closed-20141215-story.html
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