US winter storms: More rain, snow pelt California as Biden declares disaster to speed aid

US winter storms: More rain, snow pelt California as Biden declares disaster to speed aid

 LOS ANGELES (California, US), Jan 17 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Soggy Californians wearily endured their ninth successive storm in a three-week period that has brought destructive flooding, heavy snowfalls and at least 19 deaths, and forecasters said more of the same loomed for another day.

“Rain and heavy mountain snow to continue across the West,” the National Weather Service (NWS) said.

One to three feet (30 to 91 centimeters) of new snow fell over the weekend in parts of California’s Sierra Nevada range.

Some areas of the central Sierra have received more than seven feet of snow in the last seven days, a research station run by the University of California at Berkeley reported. And the white stuff just keeps falling.

“Periods of moderate to heavy snow continued into Monday,” the NWS’s Sacramento office tweeted.

US President Joe Biden late Saturday declared a major disaster in the country’s most populous state, allowing the federal government to expedite aid — including help with temporary housing and repairs — to Californians hit by flooding and landslides.

Drier weather appeared in the offing later in the week for a state more used to drought than to deluges that have flooded farm fields, closed major highways and inundated some urban areas.

“Dry weather returns on Tuesday, followed by a weak system Wednesday,” the NWS tweeted.

Some flooding remains possible, the NWS said, “especially given the very wet antecedent conditions.”

More than 11,000 homes remained without power in California, according to poweroutage.us.

Parts of coastal California received a brief break in the rain, and residents there took advantage of the less inclement weather.

But much of the state was still struggling to cope with weeks of flooding and sometimes with personal disasters.

Governor Gavin Newsom urged Californians to remain vigilant and exercise “common sense over the course of the next 24 to 48 hours.”

Between the repeated storms of recent weeks, workers have rushed to clear some of the mess, shoveling mud from roads and using heavy machinery to remove fallen trees or clear rockslides.

Winter storms are not unusual in California. But global warming is making them wetter and more powerful.

The past three months in San Francisco have been the rainiest — with 20 inches of rain in the period — since the winter of 1972-73.

Despite that, the farm fields of California, a breadbasket to the country, have yet to fully recover from years of drought. — NNN-AGENCIES

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