City
Epaper

Over 17mn people in California under flood watches

By IANS | Updated: March 9, 2023 10:10 IST

San Francisco, March 9 More than 17.5 million people across central and Northern California, including the San Francisco ...

Open in App

San Francisco, March 9 More than 17.5 million people across central and Northern California, including the San Francisco Bay area and state capital Sacramento, were under flood watches ahead of a storm set to lash the region on Thursday with dangerous amounts of rain in most of the places that currently have existing layers of heavy snow.

"A storm arriving on Thursday will bring a threat of flooding from a combination of heavy rain and snowmelt to lower elevations and foothills in California, especially below 5000 feet," CNN quoted the Weather Prediction Center as saying in its latest forecast.

"And heavy, wet snow at higher elevations will lead to difficult travel and impacts from snow load. Creeks and streams in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada will be most vulnerable to flooding from rain and snowmelt," the center added.

Officials in Monterey county have advised residents and businesses, especially in the Big Sur area, to stock up on essentials that would suffice for at least two weeks.

The Big Sur area, roughly 150 miles south of San Francisco, is one of central California's renowned tourist attractions with picturesque rugged cliffs, mountains and hidden beaches along the Pacific Coast Highway.

The county has also made sandbags available for residents to protect their property.

Meanwhile in Marin county, Fire Department chief Jason Weber said they will have staff prepared for rescues in anticipation of possible flooding, county Fire Chief Jason Weber said.

"Our reservoirs are all full from storms earlier this year. With reservoirs full, we expect our creeks will rise more rapidly with most of the rain becoming runoff," Weber told CNN.

This week's severe weather threat comes as much of California has been hit with several back-to-back rounds of heavy snow that made roads impassable for days and knocked out power for thousands of residents as temperatures dropped.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Jason WeberCNNFire DepartmentFacebook groupTwitter sportsInternational data corp.Fire serviceState for international tradeState sportsU.s. newsAbc news' instagram
Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsTyler Reddick Wins First Daytona 500 After Multi-Car Crashes Disrupt Race (Watch Videos)

BusinessNetflix to Acquire Warner Bros Studios and Streaming Assets in $72 Billion Mega Deal

MumbaiMumbai Fire: Major Blaze Erupts at Scrap Godown in Kurla, No Injures Reported (Watch Video)

NationalPatna Fire: Massive Blaze Erupts Inside Mall Restaurant, Several Feared Trapped (Watch Video)

InternationalJim Acosta Expected to Leave CNN Network After Removal from Weekday Time Slot

International Realted Stories

InternationalFairPoint: Smarter wars, not longer ones - India’s lesson for a restless world

InternationalAll Indian seafarers in Persian Gulf are safe: Govt

InternationalNaxalism, Kashmir militancy see major decline over 12 years: Report

InternationalCalifornia court rules Stanford University can keep Mao Zedong aide's diaries, marking setback for Beijing: Report

InternationalEx-Pakistani minister calls for creating panel to examine cases of forced conversion, marriage of minor girls