WEATHER General Thread for Giant California storm "L" (Statewide stories, not just Oroville Dam)

Melodi

Disaster Cat
High Risk of Flooding in Northern California as Waterways Reach Limits: Weather Service
Posted 11:27 AM, February 19, 2017, by Los Angeles Times, Updated at 02:03PM, February 19, 2017

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oroville-sunday.jpg

With a reduced flow on Sunday, most of the water being released from the Oroville Dam is not going down the spillway, it's broken through and is going down the hillside. (Credit: Marcus Yam/Los Angeles Times)

Officials said there was a high risk of flooding in parts of already-saturated Northern California as the latest “atmospheric river” storm moved in.

The National Weather Service on Sunday said the highest risk for flooding was in a large swath of the region from Monterey to Marin County on the coast then into the Sacramento Valley and Sierra Nevada. The storm is expected to put added stress on levees, streams, creeks and rivers that are already approaching dangerously high water levels.

Parts of Northern California are already on track to have the wettest winter ever recorded.

On Sunday, the NWS warned that the San Joaquin River at Vernalis “has reached danger stage. Greater risk for levee problems.”

Click here to read the full story on LATimes.com.
Related stories

Government Misjudged Strength of Oroville Emergency Spillway, Records Show
Heavy Downpours Likely to Test Repairs to Oroville Dam Spillway
10 Inches of Rain Headed for Oroville Dam Area, Revised Storm Forecast Warns

Filed in: Local News

Topics: Monterey, Monterey County, sacramento, Sierra Nevada
http://ktla.com/2017/02/19/high-ris...ia-as-waterways-reach-limits-weather-service/
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
OK, I'm going off for a bath and probably an early bedtime with a nice fantasy novel or something; everyone please keep posting and if I can't sleep I'll be back later, otherwise I will check in the morning.....
 

Be Well

may all be well
Thank you for starting this thread.

My best friend who lives in Placerville emailed me yesterday:

We are due for mucho rain on monday
Over four inches on monday alone...
 

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
_______________
Central Valley urged to be ready to ‘evacuate quickly’ as another storm approaches

IMG_1_RP_WILLIAMS_FREEWA_2_1_L0ANJUF2_L296130542



MAXWELL

Forecasters with the National Weather Service offered a stark warning Sunday for just about everyone living in the soggy, soaked Central Valley.

“Pretty much anybody needs to be prepared for the possibility that they may have to evacuate quickly,” said Sacramento meteorologist Brooke Bingaman.

Though most of the valley avoided further flooding Saturday night, the worst may be yet to come Monday and Tuesday, Bingaman said.

On Sunday, the weather service issued a flood warning in urban areas and along small streams through Thursday for the counties that make up the Sacramento and northern San Joaquin valleys, as well as for most of the counties that sit along the valleys’ rim.

“We may see flooding in locations which haven’t been impacted in many years,” the alert reads.

In other words, those living anywhere near a river, a slough, a levee, a creek or a canal need to be ready to flee flood waters at a moment’s notice.

Case in point: Maxwell, a rice-farming town of 1,100 people an hour north of Sacramento. It suddenly flooded early Saturday morning as storm runoff overwhelmed a local creek, filling a neighborhood and small business district with more than a foot of water.

Bingaman said the same scenario in Maxwell could happen in just about any low-lying area.

“We have been hit hard with storm after storm after storm since early January, so our soils are very saturated and it’s getting to the point where there’s no place for the water to go,” she said.

In Maxwell, the floodwaters were receding Sunday morning and only one person was still at a Red Cross shelter in nearby Williams, said Jim Saso, assistant sheriff at the Colusa County Sheriff’s Office. But with the next storm approaching, he urged residents to be ready to get out again.

“If they were affected (by the floodwaters) before, they’ll probably be affected again,” Saso said.

In Maxwell Sunday, residents hurriedly stacked sandbags made from rice sacks around their houses as they prepared for that eventuality.

“It’s going to be worse than the last one,” said Richard Airozo, 77.

Firefighters awoke him about 4 a.m. Saturday with a knock on the door, as water was already seeping into his garage.

By noon on Sunday, he had returned to his house and removed soaked carpet from his living room. It was piled in a damp stack next to his driveway. Inside the house, a portable heater and fan was drying the room.

Kim Troughton, 52, spent Saturday and Sunday cooking meals for firefighters and police in Maxwell’s fire hall.

She said she wasn’t sure it made sense to start cleaning out her restaurant, Kim’s Country Cafe, before the next storm hit.

“If we get more water, it’s damned if you do, damned if you don’t,” she said. Instead, she planned to spend the afternoon laying sandbags around her house.

Two hours south in the San Joaquin Valley, locals nervously were watching the swollen San Joaquin River. The river at a critical measuring station near Vernalis southeast of Tracy had filled to “danger stage” Saturday night. That’s the point that emergency officials say water could over-top levees.

“We’re bracing for flooding,” said Jenny Rich, a spokeswoman for San Joaquin County. “We’re anticipating it happening.”

Low lying areas around the river, which passes by Manteca, Lathrop, Stockton and Tracy, are all are at risk. But Rich said most of the troubles are likely to occur in southern San Joaquin County.

Along the river, between Manteca and Tracy, teams of volunteers have been patrolling levees every two hours, brushing up on emergency action plans, and filling some 900 sandbags at the San Joaquin River Club, a private community of more than 800 people, said Rick Hall, a 10-year resident who is helping lead the volunteer effort.

The hope was the community could make through the next few days without hearing a blast from emergency sirens installed at the clubhouse and at a church that would warn of incoming flood waters, he said.

“Everybody’s worried, of course, but we’re just trying to be proactive,” he said.

Some of the concerns are due to the precariously full Don Pedro Reservoir, which captures water from the Tuolumne River, a key tributary of the San Joaquin.

The reservoir, which has more than twice the capacity of Folsom Lake, remained close to cresting Sunday. If it goes over the top of its spillway, it would send a gush of water that could overwhelm the small Tuolumne River channel, flood part of Modesto and cause the San Joaquin to rise.

Based on Sunday’s forecasts, the spillway could start sending out releases as early as Tuesday, said Brandon McMillan, a spokesman for the Turlock Irrigation District, which manages New Don Pedro Dam.

“Of course everything’s based on the weather and that can change,” McMillan said.

Three and a half hours to the north, engineers at the troubled Lake Oroville dam said Sunday that lake is ready to handle the influx of water from the approaching storms.

Officials said Sunday that the lake levels continued to dip and are where they should be for this time of year to catch additional rain and snowmelt.

The lake had dropped Sunday to nearly 50 feet below the dam’s emergency spillway.

On Feb. 7, during a round of winter storms, DWR engineers discovered a cavernous hole in the lower section of the dam’s main spillway, a 3,000-foot concrete span that acts as the dam’s primary flood-control outlet during the rainy season. Fearing the spillway would become inoperable, dam operators stopped the flows for a time, then gradually reactivated releases.

With runoff from the stormy Sierra Nevada still rushing in, reservoir levels climbed, and on Feb. 11, water overtopped the dam’s emergency spillway for the first time in its 48-year history. Unlike the main spillway, which is lined in concrete, the adjacent emergency spillway dumps water in uncontrolled sheets over a 1,700-foot concrete lip onto a steep, wooded hillside.

The next afternoon, a day and a half after the emergency system activated, the hillside just below the spillway lip was showing serious erosion, raising fears the structure would collapse. The concerns prompted mandatory evacuation orders for Butte, Yuba and Sutter counties covering nearly 200,000 people.

The order was lifted Tuesday, after DWR cranked up releases on the main spillway, despite the damage to its midsection, and managed to lower reservoir levels below the emergency lip.

On Sunday, the flows out the main, damaged spillway had been reduced to nearly half as much as much as they were during the heat of the crisis. Officials said the lower flows were allowing crews to use cranes and dredges to clear the debris that formed in the channel below the spillways. The debris has raised water levels to the point that Oroville’s power plant – the dam’s primary release outlet outside of flood season – can’t operate.

Once the debris is cleared and the power plant is restarted, the facility is capable of draining another 14,000 cfs from the lake.

“We’re shooting to be able to re-operate it a week from Monday if we need to,” said Chris Orrock, a spokesman for the Department of Water Resources, which manages the dam. But he noted “it’s not a guaranteed date.”

Meanwhile, despite of the wet weather, crews continue to haul rock and cement into the eroded areas below the emergency spillway in case it should need to be used again.

http://www.sacbee.com/news/weather/article133714379.html
 

sssarawolf

Has No Life - Lives on TB
This reminds me of the spring of 1969, lots and lots of rain for months. Mudslides with houses buried in mud, trees going over, streets flooded, houses sliding of the mountain sides. boulders coming down into houses. Whole hillsides just sliding away. They best not act like this hasn't happened before because I was there when it did.

People dig out, stay and a few years down the road houses full of mud again.

Then come fall and all the grasses dieing from the dry months and it's time for fire.

But I do wish and pray for all those in harm's way out there.
 

Broccoli

Contributing Member
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y3hSrjIWRm0


"Nightmare" Situation Unfolding | Nuclear Power Plant in Flood Zone | Evacuations at Wilton!
MrMBB333

Published on Feb 19, 2017

Feb. 19, 2017: **BREAKING-IMMINENT FLOOD** 8pm MST: Evacuations are underway in the SE Sacramento Valley area as the Consumnes River near Wilton CA is set to flood tonight. **The Rancho Seco Nuclear Power Plant is in the middle of the "IMMINENT" Flood Zone! BIG situation underway! *Stay safe people | Protect your pets and animals.*
 

Red Baron

Paleo-Conservative
_______________
Good idea to have another thread.

I posted this earlier on the dam thread. Seems relevant here,

Doom Meister Doug, and Melodi on her new thread, seem to have the "big picture" well in hand.

I was thinking that the future of the city of Oroville is not solely dependent on the Oroville Dam. The city of Oroville and many, many, many other small and medium size communities need to think very carefully about being totally isolated over the next few days due to a forecast high wind event, heavy rains, flooding, road closures, power outages, communication failures etc., ad finitum.

We are now talking about a regional or maybe even a statewide disaster situation.

During the height of a flood event with roads, power and communications severely compromised WHERE DO YOU ACTUALLY EVACUATE TO?

If every populated area is having the same problems as yours, there comes a point in time where THERE IS NO PLACE LEFT TO EVACUATE TO.

I sincerely doubt that local, state and federal emergency plans have a practical and actionable emergency plan that would actually work in a worst case scenario.

Why?

Example #1 - Gasoline

How many dozens of evacuations have already been hampered by the lack of automotive fuel along the evacuation routes? How many hurricane evacuations have already pointed this shortcoming out? Hundreds of thousands of people sitting for hours in traffic and running out of gasoline. It happened in Houston, Florida, Georgia, New York, Jersey etc. etc.

Unless fuel stocks can be prepositioned on major traffic routes -before- an evacuation is declared, they are just sending people out into the maelstrom only to be stranded alone on the roadside.

Living in Oroville or anywhere else in the region, I would be very carefully considering what my personal family plan of action is. Regardless of what the authorities are or are not saying.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
The link to the Sacramento weather is here. Well, the forecasters are still saying the are around Sacramento and Lake Oroville are going to get creamed with rain and snow over the next five days or so. The good news is things get much colder later in the week, which means snow and not rain, plus snow melt will be much reduced.

http://forecast.weather.gov/MapClick...6#.WKqYoW8rLm6

Detailed Forecast
TonightRain. The rain could be heavy at times. Temperature rising to around 40 by 4am. Breezy, with a south wind around 23 mph, with gusts as high as 34 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New precipitation amounts between 1 and 2 inches possible.

Washington's BirthdayRain. The rain could be heavy at times. High near 41. Breezy, with a south wind 23 to 28 mph decreasing to 17 to 22 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 41 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New precipitation amounts between 3 and 4 inches possible.

Monday NightRain before 4am, then rain and snow. The rain and snow could be heavy at times. Low around 33. Windy, with a south wind 31 to 36 mph increasing to 40 to 45 mph after midnight. Winds could gust as high as 70 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New snow accumulation of 1 to 2 inches possible.

TuesdayRain and snow showers, becoming all snow after 10am. The rain and snow could be heavy at times. High near 34. Breezy, with a south southwest wind 22 to 29 mph, with gusts as high as 44 mph. Chance of precipitation is 90%. New snow accumulation of 4 to 8 inches possible.

Tuesday NightSnow showers. Low around 27. South wind 11 to 18 mph, with gusts as high as 28 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New snow accumulation of 2 to 4 inches possible.

WednesdaySnow showers likely. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 31. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New snow accumulation of 1 to 2 inches possible.

Wednesday NightA 40 percent chance of snow showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 24. New snow accumulation of less than one inch possible.

ThursdayA slight chance of snow showers. Partly sunny, with a high near 31.

Thursday NightA slight chance of snow showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 19.

FridayA chance of snow. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 32.
Friday NightA chance of snow. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 23.
SaturdayA chance of snow. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 35.
Saturday NightA slight chance of snow showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 24.
SundayA slight chance of snow. Partly sunny, with a high near 34.
Doomer Doug, a.k.a. Doug McIntosh now has a blog at www.doomerdoug.wordpress.com
My end of the world e book "Day of the Dogs" will soon be available for sale at smashwords. The url is
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/267340 It is also at the following url
http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B007BRLFYU
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
Rainfall totals for Shasta, Oroville, Sacramento
The link is here.

http://www.cnrfc.noaa.gov/precipMaps...=24&synoptic=0

Sacramento got one quarter inch, but the Shasta Dam got 2 and 1/4 inches of rain. Oroville got 1/4 inch rain, but Brush Creek nearby got 1.58 inches of rain.
This was for Sunday ending at midnight. The heaviest rain is for Monday/Tuesday and Weds so we shall see.
Doomer Doug, a.k.a. Doug McIntosh now has a blog at www.doomerdoug.wordpress.com
My end of the world e book "Day of the Dogs" will soon be available for sale at smashwords. The url is
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/267340 It is also at the following url
http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B007BRLFYU
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Thanks everyone for keeping this thread alive - I think we have at least a few more days to go on this band of storms; here's a local story from the first Newspaper to go onto the Internet - The San Jose Mercury News...


California storms: Wrecked ‘cement ship’ won’t be dynamited or repaired, state says

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The S.S. Palo Alto at Rio Del Mar in Aptos was pummeled by waves on Saturday, causing the stern of the cement ship to break off. (Kevin Johnson -- Santa Cruz Sentinel)
By Paul Rogers | progers@bayareanewsgroup.com |
PUBLISHED: January 23, 2017 at 10:51 am | UPDATED: January 24, 2017 at 6:37 am

Torn apart by pounding storm waves over the weekend, the S.S. Palo Alto, a 434-foot-long landmark at Seacliff State Beach in Aptos that has been known for 87 years as “the cement ship,” will not be hauled away, dynamited or repaired, state parks officials said Monday.

Instead, it will go down as one of the casualties of the Winter of 2017, just like the historic drive-through sequoia tree that collapsed earlier this month during torrential rains at Calaveras Big Trees State Park in Calaveras County.

SJM-CEMENTSHIP-0124web“Barring any threat to public safety, the plan is to let nature take its course,” said Bill Wolcott, public safety superintendent with the Santa Cruz District of the California Department of Parks and Recreation.

On Monday, a steady stream of people walked along the beach, which was deep with broken trees and driftwood, to see the wrecked landmark. Many took photos and video.

“It’s crazy,” said David Carlon, a pharmacy technician from Watsonville. “I couldn’t believe it when I saw it. That ship is a big part of the history of Santa Cruz. As a kid, I used to tag along out on it with my aunts and uncles and my little fishing pole.”

The former steamship, which is actually made of concrete, was built as an oil tanker in Oakland in 1919 when steel was in short supply. It was not completed in time for the war, however, and was purchased by the Seacliff Amusement Company and towed to the beach at Aptos, 10 miles south of Santa Cruz, and deliberately sunk in 1930.

A 500-foot-long wooden fishing pier was built out to the vessel, and it was converted into a tourist destination with a big neon sign. Top big bands like Benny Goodman, Paul Whiteman and Tommy Dorsey’s orchestras played at the ship’s Rainbow Ballroom with its white ash dance floor. There was a restaurant called the Fish Palace and a swimming pool.
Related Articles

Cement Ship ‘not going to disappear,’ scientist said in 2016
Santa Cruz County’s Cement Ship torn apart by massive waves

But the Depression ruined hopes of promoters to build a hotel, residential community and other amenities on the coastal bluffs. The company went bankrupt, and the California state parks department began purchasing the land and later bought the ship in 1936 for $1. For decades, the public was allowed to wander out onto its decks. But as time, thousand of birds and the sea degraded it, eventually the ship was closed nearly 20 years ago. It remained well known to millions of visitors and locals over generations, and the pier continues to be a popular fishing spot for anglers trying to land surf perch in a spot where brown pelicans regularly drift overhead and sea lions and dolphins swim near the shore.
When the SS Palo Alto was brought to Aptos in 1930, it had a dance hall, restaurant and other amenities. (Santa Cruz Sentinel)
When the SS Palo Alto was brought to Aptos in 1930, it had a dance hall, restaurant and other amenities. (Santa Cruz Sentinel)





On Saturday, as waves reached a record 34-feet high in Monterey Bay, a section of the ship’s stern about 50 feet long broke off from the main hull and flipped on its side. The ship had been damaged last February during other large storms.

Reading this on your iPhone or iPad? Check out our new Apple News app channel here and click the + at the top of the page to save to your Apple News favorites.

Breaking up the massive broken concrete pieces now and hauling them away would cost millions of dollars, said Wolcott, and repairing it is even less feasible.

“Since the day that it was brought to Aptos, it’s been under wear and tear by the forces of nature,” Wolcott said. “It’s been slowly deteriorating over time.”

The doomed vessel will be left to become an artificial reef for fish and other creatures, he added, and will likely take decades to eventually break up entirely and be taken back by the ocean. Another reason to leave the waves to slowly do the job: the ship is part of the community’s identity, he said.

“The ship still remains an icon and a symbol for Aptos and that beach. There is a significant amount of history there. It’s a landmark,” he said. “It’s remarkable. The visual impact of seeing something that big damaged by a storm that strong was surprising. Many of us, including myself, remember going out there as a kid and fishing.”

Carolyn Brock, a Seattle resident who was visiting family in the area, walked the beach Monday and wondered if the ruins of the ship would break up more this winter.

“I hope it doesn’t wreck the pier,” she said. “I remember first seeing it 10 years ago. It’s changed. A lot.”

On Monday, Seacliff State Beach remained officially closed due to damage from the storm, including a sinkhole on the main entrance road, downed trees and landslides near the RV campground, which was closed last Thursday for safety. The pier also will remain closed for weeks until a contractor can get out in a boat and underwater gear to assess whether the punishing storms compromised its structural integrity, Wolcott said.

The beach is still accessible, however, by people walking from other shoreline areas, such as Rio Del Mar, or coming down a set of wooden stairs just south of the main park entrance.
http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/01/...hip-wont-be-dynamited-or-repaired-state-says/
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
This series of storms isn't over yet...nor is the aftermath


Northern, Central California Gear Up for Yet Another Drenching Rainstorm

by Alex Johnson, Chelsea Bailey and Associated Press

Dangerous floods and landslides are feared as another "atmospheric river" makes its way over Northern and Central California, forecasters warned Monday.

The area likely to take the worst hit is central California, between Sacramento and San Francisco, Kevin Roth, a senior meteorologist with The Weather Channel told
NBC NEWS.
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Image:
Workers with the California Department of Transportation repair a section of Interstate 15 on Sunday Feb. 15. David Pardo / AP

"Landslides and mudslides are certainly a possibility," Roth said.

The worst of the storm, which could dump 2 to 4 inches of rain on an already-sodden landscape, should swirl into the state sometime after 3 p.m. local time on Monday, Roth said.

The entire Sacramento Valley is under a flood warning through early Tuesday, the National Weather Service said.
That includes Oroville, where almost 200,000 people were forced to evacuate last week as an earlier storm damaged a spillway behind the Lake Oroville dam.

Five construction contractors at the Orville dam were fired on Friday for posting photos of the dam on social media, according to officials with the California Department of Water Resources. The contractors were employed by Syblon Reid and were terminated because their posts violated the company's social media policy.

At the behest of local officials in Stanislaus County — who warned that the Tuolumne River's Don Pedro Reservoir could overflow in the next day or so — Louise Singleton packed a "bug-out" bag of necessities in case she and her nine children have to flee at a moment's notice.

"You never know what's going to happen," Singleton told NBC station KCRA of Sacramento. "It might be an uncontrolled spill, and then Don Pedro's going to end up in my back yard."
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IMAGE: Flooding in Maxwell, California
Flooding Saturday in Maxwell, California. AP

In the San Joaquin Valley, residents were patrolling levees for signs of danger, reviewing evacuation plans and filling hundreds of sand bags after the San Joaquin River kept rising.

"Our community is pulling together like real champs," San Joaquin River Club resident Paula Martin told The Associated Press. Martin is helping coordinate emergency plans for the private neighborhood of 800 homes.

Martin said the neighborhood has sirens in a clubhouse and church that can warn residents of impending flooding.

The National Weather Service predicted "excessive rainfall" over the San Francisco Bay Area through Monday evening.

"This rainfall will likely result in widespread flooding as well as debris flows," including mud and rock slides, it said.

"More rain is the last thing" those parts of the state need, said Danielle Banks, a meteorologist for The Weather Channel, who also warned of strong winds and power failures, because the ground in Northern and Central California is already saturated from the storms last week and this weekend, which spanned the state, killing at least five people.


The San Joaquin River was approaching the top of levees and could remain at that level for four days, said Tim Daly, a spokesman with the San Joaquin County Office of Emergency Services.

"When the water gets that high and more water is coming, there is just too much pressure and levees can break," Daly told the AP. "They can be topped."

The Don Pedro reservoir, which captures water from the Tuolumne River, a key tributary of the San Joaquin, was at 97 percent capacity.

In colder, higher elevations farther east, the rail will be snow, probably very heavy, according to the National Weather Service, which predicted that several more feet will fall up in the Sierra Nevada.

That could mean even more problems later in the week, because "runoff from the mountains will eventually flow downstream," it said.

Topics Weather, U.S. news
First Published Feb 20 2017, 1:17 am ET
Next Story Powerful California Storms Leave Thousands Without Power
http://www.nbcnews.com/news/weather...-gear-yet-another-drenching-rainstorm-n723186
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Former BIL says that commute was "h..l" and that five minutes ago the Central California Coast was "getting pounded"...
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I am going to post this on both flood threads because there is information here on the dam (and other questions that have come up) but also general Northern California storm reporting - as I put on the other thread my ex brother in law reported that his commute was "h..l" (and he doesn't swear) and that as of about 15 minutes ago it was "coming down in buckets" on the Central California Coast (near Morro Bay).


Reservoir Spillway Gates Opened For First Time in 20 Years as Heavy Rains Slam California
By Eric Chaney and Ada Carr
Feb 20 2017 07:00 PM EST
weather.com

Now Playing:
Massive Landslide Caught on Camera

Story Highlights

Two people died in a fatal accident on slick roads in Modesto.

The spillway gates of the Don Pedro Reservoir were opened for the first time in 20 years.

Officials warned residents in northern California to be ready to evacuate again.

Some residents are patrolling levees for signs of danger and filling hundreds of sand bags.

For the first time in 20 years, the spillway gates of the Don Pedro Reservoir were opened Monday as a round of heavy rains hit northern California.

The Stanislaus Consolidated Fire Protection District told KCRA.com that the outflows from the reservoir were between 18,000 and 20,000 cubic feet per second as of 3 p.m. Monday.

The reservoir was at 825 feet in elevation when the releases began, also according to KCRA. Water flowing from the reservoir will go down the spillway, take a left and follow a channel that was cut out in 1997 before rejoining the Tuolumne River about a mile downstream. TID said the spillway will be open for at least four days.
The controlled spillway hasn’t been used since 1997.

(MORE: Another Round of Dangerous Flooding, Landslides and Damaging Winds Underway in California)

California Highway patrol officers said weather was a factor in a double-fatal accident on Milnes Road, CBS Sacramento reports. A pickup truck traveling eastbound lost control and crossed the center line, striking another pickup truck head-on. Both drivers were pronounced dead at the scene.

Though these are the first deaths from this round of storms, flooding from the first round left at least seven people dead.

The region's over-saturated rivers and creeks are already beginning to cause problems as the second round moves in, flooding streets and bringing trees and debris crashing into roadways. More than a dozen reports of flooding and debris flows have come in from as far south as Monterey and as far north as Santa Rosa.

Monday forecasters issued flash flood warnings throughout the San Francisco Bay Area and elsewhere in Northen California. The alerts were issued for Monterey County and Coyote Creek in Santa Clara County.

The San Benito County Sheriff's Office has issued voluntary evacuation orders for residents living near Pacheco Creek, KION reports, as the creek is closing in on its moderate flood stage at 12 feet and expected to reach 16.

In Oroville, where heavy rains recently damaged the reservoir dam forcing the evacuation of nearly 200,000 people, officials say waters are receding behind the dam, and the reservoir is at 81 percent capacity with room for incoming runoff.

A search and rescue team from the Butte County Sherrif's office rescued a family of five, including three young children, from rising waters in Chico Sunday night. The family home was surrounded by quick moving water that was waist deep at times, the sheriff's office reports, but deputies were able to bring the family to safety by boat.

Northbound Highway 101 was shut down Monday morning in Redwood City due to flooding and an accident, KRON reports. Highway 192 in Santa Barbara was closed by downed trees and power lines. A Cal Trans tweet asked drivers to use other routes for the rest of the day.

In Marin County, officials have activated the county's emergency operation center as the storm rolls in. Already on Monday morning, a mudslide dropped debris and a large tree onto Sir Francis Drake Boulevard, briefly closing the roadway in both directions.

(MORE: What El Niño Means for 2017 Hurricane Season)

According to energy provider PG&E, more than 15,000 customers were without power Monday morning, and KRON is reporting average flight delays of 228 minutes at San Francisco International Airport, where more than 200 flights had been canceled or delayed as of midday Monday.

Officials are warning residents in northern California they need to be ready to evacuate again. Colusa County Assistant Sheriff Jim Saso told the Associated Press Sunday that even though floodwaters are receding in the farm community of Maxwell, where dozens of people sought higher ground during flooding rain earlier in the week, people need to stay alert.

"We're telling these people to keep a bag close by and get ready to leave again," said Saso. "If the water comes back up, it's going to be those areas affected."

Some northern California residents hoped patrolling levees for signs of danger and filling hundreds of sand bags will mean evacuations won’t be necessary.

"We have a levee response team, a sand bagging team, teams to check on what walkers checking on the levees find," San Joaquin River Club resident Paula Martin, who is helping coordinate emergency plans for the private neighborhood of 800 homes, told the AP.

Martin said the community, located about 80 miles east of San Francisco in Tracy, California, decided to take action after the San Joaquin River started rising. The neighborhood has sirens in a clubhouse and church that can warn residents of impending flooding.

"Our community is pulling together like real champs," she said, adding that volunteers have been patrolling the levees every two hours.

The San Joaquin River at a measuring station near Vernalis — about 10 miles southeast of Tracy — remained Sunday at "danger stage," meaning it keeps approaching the top of levees, Tim Daly, a spokesman with San Joaquin County Office of Emergency Services told the AP.

"When the water gets that high and more water is coming, there is just too much pressure and levees can break," Daly said. "They can be topped."

MORE ON WEATHER.COM: Damaging Storms Hit Southern California
https://weather.com/news/weather/news/california-flooding-impacts
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Melodi

Disaster Cat
When I was a tiny girl, my Dad owned the bait and tackle shop at the start of this pier; my first kitten was born to a Seal Beach dock cat who managed to sneak into the my Dad's back storage room and have her kittens; I was taught to cast a fishing line from this pier - I hope it stays standing - this photo shows the extreme storm conditions and high tides that went with this storm system.

https://dsx.weather.com//util/image...=551&api=7db9fe61-7414-47b5-9871-e17d87b8b6a0
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California Megaflood: Lessons from a Forgotten Catastrophe
A 43-day storm that began in December 1861 put central and southern California underwater for up to six months, and it could happen again
By B. Lynn Ingram on January 1, 2013

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Credit: USGS.gov

Geologic evidence shows that truly massive floods, caused by rainfall alone, have occurred in California every 100 to 200 years. Such floods are likely caused by atmospheric rivers: narrow bands of water vapor about a mile above the ocean that extend for thousands of kilometers.

The atmospheric river storms featured in a January 2013 article in Scientific American that I co-wrote with Michael Dettinger, The Coming Megafloods, are responsible for most of the largest historical floods in many western states. The only megaflood to strike the American West in recent history occurred during the winter of 1861-62. California bore the brunt of the damage. This disaster turned enormous regions of the state into inland seas for months, and took thousands of human lives.

The costs were devastating: one quarter of California’s economy was destroyed, forcing the state into bankruptcy.

Today, the same regions that were submerged in 1861-62 are home to California’s fastest-growing cities. Although this flood is all but forgotten, important lessons from this catastrophe can be learned. Much of the insight can be gleaned from harrowing accounts in diary entries, letters and newspaper articles, as well as the book Up and Down California in 1860-1864, written by William Brewer, who surveyed the new state’s natural resources with state geologist Josiah Whitney.

In 1861, farmers and ranchers were praying for rain after two exceptionally dry decades. In December their prayers were answered with a vengeance, as a series of monstrous Pacific storms slammed—one after another—into the West coast of North America, from Mexico to Canada. The storms produced the most violent flooding residents had ever seen, before or since.

Sixty-six inches of rain fell in Los Angeles that year, more than four times the normal annual amount, causing rivers to surge over their banks, spreading muddy water for miles across the arid landscape. Large brown lakes formed on the normally dry plains between Los Angeles and the Pacific Ocean, even covering vast areas of the Mojave Desert. In and around Anaheim, , flooding of the Santa Ana River created an inland sea four feet deep, stretching up to four miles from the river and lasting four weeks.

Residents in northern California, where most of the state’s 500,000 people lived, were contending with devastation and suffering of their own. In early December, the Sierra Nevada experienced a series of cold arctic storms that dumped 10 to 15 feet of snow, and these were soon followed by warm atmospheric rivers storms. The series of warm storms swelled the rivers in the Sierra Nevada range so that they became raging torrents, sweeping away entire communities and mining settlements in the foothills—California’s famous “Gold Country.” A January 15, 1862, report from the Nelson Point Correspondence described the scene: “On Friday last, we were visited by the most destructive and devastating flood that has ever been the lot of ‘white’ men to see in this part of the country. Feather River reached the height of 9 feet more than was ever known by the ‘oldest inhabitant,’ carrying away bridges, camps, stores, saloon, restaurant, and much real-estate.” Drowning deaths occurred every day on the Feather, Yuba and American rivers. In one tragic account, an entire settlement of Chinese miners was drowned by floods on the Yuba River.

This enormous pulse of water from the rain flowed down the slopes and across the landscape, overwhelming streams and rivers, creating a huge inland sea in California’s enormous Central Valley—a region at least 300 miles long and 20 miles wide. Water covered farmlands and towns, drowning people, horses and cattle, and washing away houses, buildings, barns, fences and bridges. The water reached depths up to 30 feet, completely submerging telegraph poles that had just been installed between San Francisco and New York, causing transportation and communications to completely break down over much of the state for a month.

William Brewer wrote a series of letters to his brother on the east coast describing the surreal scenes of tragedy that he witnessed during his travels in the region that winter and spring. In a description dated January 31, 1862, Brewer wrote:

Thousands of farms are entirely under water—cattle starving and drowning. All the roads in the middle of the state are impassable; so all mails are cut off. The telegraph also does not work clear through. In the Sacramento Valley for some distance the tops of the poles are under water. The entire valley was a lake extending from the mountains on one side to the coast range hills on the other. Steamers ran back over the ranches fourteen miles from the river, carrying stock, etc, to the hills. Nearly every house and farm over this immense region is gone. America has never before seen such desolation by flood as this has been, and seldom has the Old World seen the like.

Brewer describes a great sheet of brown rippling water extending from the Coast Range to the Sierra Nevada. One-quarter of the state’s estimated 800,000 cattle drowned in the flood, marking the beginning of the end of the cattle-based ranchero society in California. One-third of the state’s property was destroyed, and one home in eight was destroyed completely or carried away by the floodwaters.

Sacramento, 100 miles up the Sacramento River from San Francisco, was (and still is) precariously located at the confluence of the Sacramento and American rivers. In 1861, the city was in many ways a hub: the young state’s sparkling new capital, an important commercial and agricultural center, and the terminus for stagecoaches, wagon trains, the pony express and riverboats from San Francisco. Although floods in Sacramento were not unknown to the residents, nothing could have prepared them for the series of deluges and massive flooding that engulfed the city that winter. The levees built to protect Sacramento from catastrophic floods crumbled under the force of the rising waters of the American River. In early January the floodwaters submerged the entire city under 10 feet of brown, debris-laden water. The water was so deep and dirty that no one dared to move about the city except by boat. The floodwaters caused immense destruction of property and loss of life.
California’s new Governor, Leland Stanford, was to be inaugurated on January 10, but the floodwaters swept through Sacramento that day, submerging the city.

Citizens fled by any means possible, yet the inauguration ceremony took place at the capital building anyway, despite the mounting catastrophe. Governor Stanford was forced to travel from his mansion to the capital building by rowboat. Following the expedited ceremony, with floodwaters rising at a rate of one foot per hour, Stanford rowed back to his mansion, where he was forced to steer his boat to a second story window in order to enter his home. Conditions did not improve in the following weeks. California’s legislature, unable to function in the submerged city, finally gave up and moved to San Francisco on January 22, to wait out the floods.

Sacramento remained underwater for months. Brewer visited the city on March 9, three months after the flooding began, and described the scene:

Such a desolate scene I hope to never see again. Most of the city is still under water, and has been there for three months. A part is out of the water, that is, the streets are above water, but every low place is full—cellars and yards are full, houses and walls wet, everything uncomfortable. No description that I can write will give you any adequate conception of the discomfort and wretchedness this must give rise to. I took a boat and two boys, and we rowed about for an hour or two. Houses, stores, stables, everything, were surrounded by water. Yards were ponds enclosed by dilapidated, muddy, slimy fences; household furniture, chairs, tables, sofas, the fragments of houses, were floating in the muddy waters or lodged in nooks and corners. I saw three sofas floating in different yards. The basements of the better class of houses were half full of water, and through the windows, one could see chairs, tables, bedsteads, etc., afloat. Through the windows of a schoolhouse I saw the benches and desks afloat. Over most of the city boats are still the only way of getting around.

The new Capital is far out in the water—the Governor’s house stands as in a lake—churches, public buildings, private buildings, everything, are wet or in the water. Not a road leading from the city is passable, business is at a dead standstill, everything looks forlorn and wretched. Many houses have partially toppled over; some have been carried from their foundations, several streets (now avenues of water) are blocked up with houses that have floated in them, dead animals lie about here and there—a dreadful picture. I don’t think the city will ever rise from the shock, I don’t see how it can.

The death and destruction of this flood caused such trauma that the city of Sacramento embarked on a long-term project of raising the downtown district by 10 to 15 feet in the seven years after the flood. Governor Stanford also raised his mansion from two to three stories, leaving empty the ground floor, to avoid damage from any future flooding events.

Downstream of Sacramento, towns and villages throughout the eastern San Francisco Bay Area were struggling with catastrophes of their own. Twenty miles northeast of San Francisco, four feet of water covered the entire town of Napa; to the east, the small town of Rio Vista on the Sacramento River was under six feet of water. The entire population of Alamo, at the foot of Mt. Diablo 50 miles east of San Francisco, was forced to flee rising floodwaters. People abandoned their homes in the middle of the night. Some found refuge, others drowned. The San Ramon Valley was one sheet of water from hill to hill as far as the eye could see. The destructive force of the floods was awesome: houses, otherwise intact and complete with their contents, were carried away in the rapids; horses, cattle, and barns were swept downstream for miles.

The heavy rains also triggered landslides and mud slides on California’s steep hillsides. For instance, in Knights Ferry and Mokelumne Hill, nearly every building was torn from its foundation and carried off by thundering landslides, and a major landslide also occurred at the town of Volcano in the Sierra foothills, killing seven people.

The 1861-62 floods extended far beyond the borders of California. They were the worst in recorded history over much of the American West, including northern Mexico, Oregon, Washington State and into British Columbia, as well as reaching inland into Nevada, Utah and Arizona. In Nevada, a normally arid state, twice its typical annual rainfall occurred in the two-month period of December 1861 to January 1862. All this excess water transformed the Carson Valley into a large lake, inundating Nevada City with nine feet of rain in 60 days.

In southern Utah, 1861-62 became known as the “year of the floods,” as homes, barns, a fiber and molasses mill and many forts were washed away, including the adobe home of a Mormon Bishop, John D. Lee. Lee had carefully recorded the weather throughout January 1862 in his diary, noting a solid period of alternating rain and snow with strong winds for most of that month. In Oregon, two and a half weeks of solid rain caused the worst flooding in this state’s history. Deluges covered huge portions of the lower Willamette Valley where Oregon City is located. Oregon City was the terminus of the Oregon Trail, and it was the state’s capital, where George Abernathy, an Oregon pioneer and the state’s first elected governor, lived and ran a thriving business. The flood destroyed his home, forcing him (and many others) to leave. Arizona was also impacted: floods occurred in the Gila, Verde, Bright Angel and Colorado River basins between January 19 and 23, 1862, and flooding was severe in Yuma, destroying the city.

Why so many people were caught off-guard by these floods remains a mystery, but clearly these immigrants did not recognize the climatic warning signs. They had never experienced such extreme flooding in the 12 years since the Gold Rush began, although lesser floods were not uncommon. It appears that the Native American populations, who had lived in the region for thousands of years, had deeper insights to the weather and hydrology, and recognized the patterns that result in devastating floods. A piece in the Nevada City Democrat described the Native American response on January 11, 1862:

We are informed that the Indians living in the vicinity of Marysville left their abodes a week or more ago for the foothills predicting an unprecedented overflow. They told the whites that the water would be higher than it has been for thirty years, and pointed high up on the trees and houses where it would come. The valley Indians have traditions that the water occasionally rises 15 or 20 feet higher than it has been at any time since the country was settled by whites, and as they live in the open air and watch closely all the weather indications, it is not improbable that they may have better means than the whites of anticipating a great storm.

The specific weather pattern that the Native Americans of the West recognized and knew would bring particularly severe flooding is once again understood today. The powerful storms originate in the warm and moist tropical Pacific Ocean. Recent research describes these storms more broadly as “atmospheric rivers,” and they often result in the worst floods in not only the American West, but across the globe.
The tragic 1861-62 floods may have temporarily served to wake-up the residents of California and the West to the possible perils of their region’s weather They saw nature at its most unpredictable and terrifying, turning in a day or an hour from benign to utterly destructive. But the costs to the state went beyond the loss of life, property and resources: California’s spirit and confidence was badly shaken.

The lessons of the 1861-62 floods should provide the impetus for flood disaster planning efforts in a region where housing developments and cities are spreading across many floodplains. A critical element of living in a place like California is an awareness of these natural disasters, which requires a deep understanding of the natural patterns and frequencies of these events. Today we have building codes for earthquake safety, but millions of new westerners are not aware of the region’s calamitous climate history. Most have never even heard of the 1861–62 floods, and those may not have been the worst that nature can regularly dish out to the region.

In a forthcoming book I co-wrote with Frances Malamud-Roam, THE WEST WITHOUT WATER: What Past Floods, Droughts, and Other Climatic Clues Tell Us About Tomorrow (University of California Press, Spring 2013) we present evidence for similar if not larger floods that have occurred every one to two centuries over the past two millennia in California, as well as nature’s flip-side: deep and prolonged droughts.

B. Lynn Ingram is a professor in the Earth and Planetary Science Department at the University of California, Berkeley. She studies past climatic and environmental change in California and other locations around the Pacific Rim.

LINK please
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Major storm soaks Bay Area, swells rivers across the region

By Kevin Fagan and Evan Sernoffsky, San Francisco Chronicle
February 20, 2017 Updated: February 20, 2017 9:59pm

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Photo: Scott Strazzante, The Chronicle
Bay Area storms and flooding, Presidents Day 2017
Media: San Francisco Chronicle

A steadily drenching rain Monday sent cars skidding, rivers and streams surging, and residents packing sandbags up and down already saturated Northern and Central California.

The National Weather Service painted the entire map of the upper half of the state with flood, snow and wind advisories, with flood warnings issued throughout the Peninsula, North Bay and the waterlogged northern Central Valley.

While most areas avoided catastrophe for most of Monday, the San Joaquin County Office of Emergency Services ordered a mandatory evacuation in Manteca, south of Woodward Avenue and west of Union Road, in an area of mostly farmland and a few homes. The order came after a levee break on the San Joaquin River, about 2 miles west of Airport Way and Perrin Road near Manteca.

Rick Hall calls in to report a trouble spot on the levee separating the San Joaquin River from the San Joaquin River Club community.

Rick Hall calls in to report a trouble spot on the levee separating the San Joaquin River from the San Joaquin River Club community.

The break was closed about 8:45 p.m., emergency services officials said, but the evacuation remained in effect and the floodwaters were moving east and north.

An evacuation center has been opened at the Lathrop Community Center, and more trouble could lie ahead. The National Weather Service issued a flash flood warning that covers much of San Joaquin County until 7:30 a.m. Tuesday.

Storm damage also affected travel in and out of Santa Cruz on Monday night. Fallen power lines closed Highway 1 in both directions near Davenport and Big Basin in Santa Cruz County, and a rockslide shut southbound lanes on Highway 17 at Los Gatos-Saratoga Road.

Reservoirs throughout the region swelled, and at the Don Pedro Reservoir in Tuolumne County, dam operators were forced to open their spillway gates for the first time in 20 years. The reservoir was near its capacity elevation of 830 feet, and sending the extra water coursing down the Tuolumne River was expected to swell it to 5 feet above flood stage downstream in Modesto by Tuesday afternoon.

“We don’t expect much of an effect from this, but we’re being cautious and telling people to stay ready for any possibility of flooding,” said Stanislaus County Sheriff’s Lt. Marc Nuno. “We have to be careful on the off chance we have to let more water out, but for now the weather’s been taking good care of us.”
Related

The California Highway Patrol set up concrete road barriers to keep traffic off Bonds Flat Road near the spillway channel downstream. The last time Don Pedro overflowed disastrously was in 1997, when it gushed water down the Tuolumne River and flooded Modesto.

Also affected by the Don Pedro releases was the area south of Tracy, where the swelling San Joaquin River could pose danger to the levees around the small farming and bedroom communities. Residents of the 1,000-population San Joaquin River Club subdivision spent the day packing sandbags and nervously watching the main levee on the edge of town. Nobody expected flooding, but they wanted to be prepared.

“We’re all coming together to watch out for each other,” said longtime resident Valerie Dupuich. “We fight like cats and dogs, but we’re family.”

“A very miserable day, weatherwise,” is how Bob Benjamin, a meteorologist with the weather service, summarized the rain patterns.

The storm — an atmospheric river of wind and concentrated moisture — focused its energy on southern San Mateo County and the Santa Cruz Mountains. But periods of heavy rain slammed the whole region, from the North Bay all the way south to Monterey County, where some neighborhoods were evacuated late in the day along the swelling Carmel River.

Rainfall totals for the 24 hours through Monday evening reached 1.8 inches in San Francisco, while Ben Lomond in Santa Cruz County recorded 5.5 inches and Kentfield in Marin County had 3.9 inches. Winds gusting up to 60 mph lashed the region.

The weather service reported that as of Monday, downtown San Francisco had surpassed its normal rain total for an entire water year
— October to September — with an accumulated 25.6 inches so far. The normal tally for a non-drought year would be 23.7 inches.

The nasty weather forced more than 100 flights to be canceled at San Francisco International Airport, but not at the airports in San Jose and Oakland.

The weather service issued flash flood warnings for several areas, including the Santa Cruz Mountains and parts of Sonoma County around Petaluma and Penngrove. In southern Alameda County, Alameda Creek leaped its banks around Niles Canyon and the Sunol Regional Wilderness, forcing the California Highway Patrol to shut down Highway 84 through Niles Canyon.

In the North Bay, the Russian and Napa rivers were forecast to rise near flood stage by early Tuesday, but Monday was no easy ride.

Small mudslides oozed down the hills lining Highway 101 in Marin and Sonoma counties as stinging rains fell in sheets all morning and afternoon in the already water-soaked region.

Miriam Gross, 32, and Aaron Leibovitz, 31, drove up from San Francisco for a relaxing Wine Country weekend, but instead they spent Monday trying to find a place to dry off.

“We wanted a quiet getaway, but instead we got flooding,” Gross said.

The couple were trying to find their way to Carneros Brewing Co. near Schellville (Sonoma County) when they ran into 2 feet of water pooling in the intersection of Highway 121 and Route 12. “It seemed like a good idea, but we can’t get there,” Gross said.

Still, for so many in the North Bay, the heavy rain came as a mixed blessing in a region still reeling from five years of drought.

“I’d rather deal with a little flooding than another year of drought,” Leibovitz said.

People in neighborhoods along Coyote Creek in San Jose — including Rock Spring residents — were warned about flooding as Anderson Reservoir continued to spill over for the first time in 11 years. Coyote Creek below the reservoir was forecast to rise more than 2 feet over its 10-foot flood stage by Tuesday.

The Presidents Day holiday spared many commuters from having to navigate swamped roadways, but the California Highway Patrol still reported scores of collisions and highway flooding problems.

By late Monday afternoon, Pacific Gas and Electric Co. reported, 21,000 customers had lost power throughout the Bay Area, and the utility had extra crews on alert for the possibility of more trouble overnight.

Damaged spillways at the Oroville Dam in Butte County led to the temporary evacuation of 188,000 people last week, but the danger of everyone having to scramble again seemed low Monday despite a whopping 10 inches of rain predicted for Monday and Tuesday. The lake level was 51 feet below the lip of the eroded emergency spillway late Monday afternoon.

Bill Croyle, acting director of the state Department of Water Resources, said Monday that 60,000 cubic feet per second of water was being released through the main spillway, which was also damaged. And though the flow coming into Oroville Reservoir was expected to swell to as much as 110,000 cfs, dam operators will still keep the outflow steady with the belief that the reservoir’s level will rise only about 5 feet — well within a safety range, Croyle said.

Skiers may have been happy with the fresh powder, but driving in the mountains was no picnic. The weather service issued a daylong winter storm warning and avalanche watch for the Sierra Nevada around Lake Tahoe, where 5 feet of snow was forecast above 7,500 feet by Tuesday evening. Blustery winds slammed mountain passes, with gusts on some ridges exceeding 150 mph, forecasters said.

Flooding and landslides were expected to be a threat to roadways below the 6,500-foot snow level through Tuesday morning. Drivers were warned to avoid heading over the mountains, where chains were required for cars without four-wheel drive on Interstate 80 and Highway 50.

Chronicle staff writers Kimberly Veklerov and Michael Cabanatuan contributed to this report.

Kevin Fagan and Evan Sernoffsky are San Francisco Chronicle staff writers. Email: kfagan@sfchronicle.com, esernoffsky@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @KevinChron, @EvanSernoffsky
http://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Major-storm-soaks-Bay-Area-swells-rivers-10945452.php
 

almost ready

Inactive
Highway 101 closed at South San Jose due to flooding, both directions. Do they still have the old coast highway down there?

NBC newsie on twitter

https://twitter.com/NBCian/status/834122339256143872

Ian CullVerified account
‏@NBCian

JUST IN: Hwy 101 closed in both directions near Coyote Creek in south #SanJose/Morgan Hill due to flooding. #CAwx @nbcbayarea


****

This is important because in the 1980's, to keep traffic confined to the main roads, permanent barriers were put in place in most of the residential/business areas to prevent people taking a back road of of the city. Too many people, apparently, found the side roads faster and easier during commute times.

Back then, of course, we had no idea they were going to put in cameras to record everyone coming in and out of SF.

So the main highway being closed can mean not just an inconvenience, but a real problem, like using the old coast highway and adding hours to a short commute.

Would like to hear from someone in the area.
 

almost ready

Inactive
About a half hour ago saw a report (forum) that Anderson Reservoir was releasing water and flooding some South San Jose neighborhoods. Could be related to the Hgy. 101 closure.

Not sure.

edited to add

Lucky day! Found a source. Same guy said that the reservoir was releasing water in that area, earlier today.

https://twitter.com/NBCian/status/833079256884273154

Ian CullVerified account
‏@NBCian

A full Anderson Reservoir, spillway in use for 1st time since 2006, and sun breaks over #MorganHill. #CAwx


Will be back later to catch up. Don't do anything exciting without me.
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
The Latest: California dam with earthquake concerns is full

By The Associated Press
SAN JOSE, Calif. February 22, 2017, 5:08 PM ET

The Latest on storms in California (all times local):

2 p.m.

Water managers in a California community say they're taking advantage of a break in storms to draw down water from behind a dam that is full, causing a creek to overflow and flood parts of San Jose.

Jim Fiedler of the Santa Clara Valley Water District said Wednesday that Anderson Dam is full. Releases over its spillway have flooded neighborhoods in San Jose.

The district is required to keep the dam 68 percent of capacity after inspections found that it could fail in a major earthquake.

Managers say it could take nine weeks to bring the water levels down to that level.

Fiedler says nearby residents aren't in danger; the dam has withstood many quakes.

The district is spending $400 million to make it earthquake proof by 2024
.



1:35 p.m.

San Jose city officials say they did not anticipate the level of flooding that submerged a neighborhood because their stream flow model showed the channel could handle the water without spilling over.

City spokesman David Vossbrink said Wednesday that officials were relying on the water district's model to determine when the creek would rise and where.

Vossbrink says the model turned out to be inaccurate for Coyote Creek when the water rose early Wednesday.

Officials say the neighborhood that flooded was not among those expected to be hit first.

Early Wednesday, city officials expanded the area for mandatory evacuations to include about 14,000 residents.



12:10 p.m.

Authorities have reopened U.S. 101 south of San Francisco after it was closed because of flooding.

The California Highway Patrol shut down the freeway early Wednesday when water spilled into a low point on the road.

The deep water covered the highway after Coyote Creek spilled over its banks and flooded areas in San Jose, California.

The city said floodwaters appeared to be subsiding after the city ordered 14,000 people to evacuate during the night.



11:25 a.m.

Irma Gonzales says police woke her and her boyfriend by pounding on her apartment door in San Jose at 2:30 a.m. and ordered them to evacuate because of flooding.

Dazed, the 59-year-old Gonzales said Wednesday she only had time to grab a change of clothes and her two Chihuahuas.

She says the creek that runs next to her two-story apartment complex was the highest she's ever seen it and looked as if it was going to overflow at any moment.

She says firefighters yelled "hurry up" and "move it" until everyone was loaded in their car.

She called the experience "scary," but disagrees with some people who are angry about the lack of information leading up to the evacuation. She says she feels she was given good warning.



11 a.m.

The mayor of San Jose, California, says the city failed to properly communicate with residents who were forced to evacuate their homes when floodwaters from a creek quickly spilled into streets during heavy rains.

City officials ordered more than 14,000 residents to leave their homes early Wednesday as water flooded homes and shut down a portion of a major freeway.

Some people said they got their first notice with a knock on their door from a firefighter in a boat.

Mayor Sam Liccardo said at a news conference that there is no question the city needs to improve communication in the future.



9:55 a.m.

Forecasters say the water level in Coyote Creek in San Jose, California, reached a 100-year high during the storm this week

The raging floodwaters early Wednesday forced thousands of residents out of their homes and shut down a major freeway.

Weather service forecaster Bob Benjamin said the creek is subsiding and remains about half a foot above flood level.



9:15 a.m.

Authorities have reopened two lanes of U.S. 101 south of San Francisco after it was closed because of flooding.

The California Highway Patrol closed all lanes in both directions at 4:40 a.m. Wednesday when water spilled into a low point on the freeway.

There is no estimate when the key commuter artery will fully reopen.

A San Jose, California, spokesman says floodwaters in the city appeared to be stabilizing after the city ordered 14,000 people to evacuate during the night. Another 22,000 people were advised to leave.



8:40 a.m.

A San Jose, California, spokesman says floodwaters there appeared to be stabilizing Wednesday after the city ordered 14,000 people to evacuate overnight.

David Vossbrink says waters remain very high.

A few hundred people have showed up at shelters after the city ordered the evacuations when floodwaters inundated homes and forced the shutdown of U.S. Highway 101.

Sandy Moll tells the Mercury News ( http://bayareane.ws/2mcmIFD ) that she had prepared for about a foot of water, but no more. The force of the water from the creek behind her house broke down her back door.

Moll says she's angry at a lack of information given before evacuations were ordered. She says she is seething at the lack of warning.

At least 14,000 residents have been evacuated.



5:30 a.m.

At least 14,000 residents have been evacuated from homes in San Jose, California, where floodwaters have inundated homes and forced the shutdown of a major freeway.

Officials say U.S. 101 is closed in both directions early Wednesday south of San Francisco because of water across lanes. There is no estimate when the key commuter artery will reopen.

Authorities went door-to-door overnight ordering thousands more people to seek higher ground as creeks and reservoirs overtopped their banks and sent chest-deep water into neighborhoods.

At least 225 residents were taken Tuesday to dry land and rinsed with soap and water to prevent them from being sickened by floodwaters that had traveled through engine fuel and garbage. No major injuries are reported.

The region is drying out after heavy rains, but flood warnings continue through Saturday morning.

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory/latest-thousands-evacuated-floods-inundate-san-jose-45655022
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
bump - we are having our own "weather bomb" here in Ireland (though of much shorter duration) so internet is in and out - so others please keep posting on this thread; I gather the serious problems now are not "Storm L" but the flooding left in its wake (and new storm bands possibly on the way)...
 

Broccoli

Contributing Member

Bad News For Sacramento River! Lake Shasta Forced To Open Spillway!
Published on Feb 23, 2017

Fair Use! Dam on Lake Shasta Opens Spillway. Flood Warning Map for 02/23/2017!
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I used to have a close friend in Clear Lake but his house burned to the ground during the fires over a year ago; now he lives back in the old house I used to live in, in Berkeley ...

Lake County News | California
Thursday
Feb 23rd

Home News Latest Sheriff’s office issues evacuation advisory for Clearlake Oaks, Clear Lake Keys
Sheriff’s office issues evacuation advisory for Clearlake Oaks, Clear Lake Keys
Tuesday, 21 February 2017 18:30 Lake County News reports
E-mail Print PDF

CLEARLAKE OAKS, Calif. – Clearlake Oaks, the Clear Lake Keys and nearby areas are the latest Lake County communities to be advised by the Lake County Sheriff’s Office to evacuate due to rising flood waters.

Early Tuesday evening, the agency issued an urgent update to the residents of those areas, shortly after it also had advised evacuations near Lakeport for the Big Valley Rancheria, Lands’ End, Corinthian Bay and Soda Bay, as Lake County News has reported.

Lt. Steve Brooks said the elevation of Clear Lake is expected to continue rising on Tuesday night.

The lake’s elevation was at 10.50 feet Rumsey at 6:15 p.m., according to the United States Geological Survey.

The rising condition of the lake is a concern, with Brooks reporting that many roadways and residences already are inundated due to the recent storms and ground saturation.

If your home or property is at risk, the sheriff’s office encourages you to take action now.

Secure your belongings – including medications and important papers – and pets and leave early, as your egress routes may be blocked by flood waters, Brooks said.

The American Red Cross has set up an evacuation shelter at the Seventh-day Adventist Church, located at 1111 Park Way in Lakeport.

Pets are welcome at the shelter, which can be reached via telephone at 707-263-6002.
http://www.lakeconews.com/index.php...aks-clear-lake-keys&catid=1:latest&Itemid=197
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
San Jose update....

Water receding but area evacuated staying thus until inspectors can access habitability of flooded area.

Currently all of the reservoirs above San Jose/Santa Clara County are full and are releasing water to relieve pressure and prepare for more run off from expected storms this coming week.

Big question now is that the water levels in Coyote Creek were not high enough to go over the levees so they're looking for the fail points right now.

More later. HC
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://abc7news.com/weather/toxic-difficult-flood-cleanup-begins-for-san-jose-families/1770343/

TOXIC, DIFFICULT FLOOD CLEANUP BEGINS FOR SAN JOSE FAMILIES

By Katie Marzullo
Updated 1 hr 23 mins ago
SAN JOSE, Calif. (KGO) -- The flood waters may be gone, but the clean-up is just beginning for the thousands of people who were forced from their homes.

RESOURCES: San Jose flood evacuation info and how to help

Late Thursday, the city reduced the scope of the San Jose evacuation area, however; some people are still not allowed back in their homes including residents in the Rock Springs area and the old Oakland Road Area.

Junk piles line 19th Street and continue to grow. They're filled with stuff that can't be saved. Many families are getting help with the overwhelming cleanup.

Toxic flood water ruined almost everything it touched.

"We started cleaning out the garage and moving the furniture and see what we could salvage and what was not," said Sue Evanicky.

Evanicky and her friends did as much as they could by themselves, but this can be dangerous work.

"I'm seeing oil, paint, toilets are flooded out so there's tons of sewage," saiD Jacob Estrada of Environmental Plus and Restoration Specialists. "Personal protective gear is mandatory here, respirators."

The company has dozens of workers in the flooded neighborhoods. The first priority is pumping out the water from 12 homes on 19th Street alone. Next, they'll clear out the debris.

"We can still try our best to decontaminate and disinfect, but for the majority of it, it's pretty much a total loss," Estrada told ABC7 News.

The city of San Jose will be providing dumpsters in the William Street and Rock Springs neighborhoods starting Friday morning.

"Folks who are within the flooded area can use those dumpsters and we will continue to monitor how that process is going so we can continue to support," said Robert Sapien.

RELATED: Flood evacuations reduced in San Jose, major damage remains

In the meantime it's neighbor helping neighbor. "This is all just stuff," said Evanicky. "It can or cannot be replaced. You just got to let go."

PHOTOS: Flood waters rip through San Jose causing damage, evacuations
 

Housecarl

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http://www.eastbaytimes.com/2017/02...d-city/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter

San Jose flood: Residents want answers from water district and city

By ERIC KURHI | ekurhi@bayareanewsgroup.com and RAMONA GIWARGIS | rgiwargis@bayareanewsgroup.com |
PUBLISHED: February 23, 2017 at 7:18 pm | UPDATED: February 23, 2017 at 8:18 pm

SAN JOSE — As hundreds of frustrated residents returned home Thursday to begin cleaning up the damage from the worst South Bay flooding in decades, water district officials said they tried to warn city officials in the hours before Coyote Creek spilled into neighborhoods that potentially destructive flows would arrive within three to four hours.

Santa Clara Valley Water District officials said they alerted the city at 2:47 a.m. Tuesday that heavy flows would arrive downtown between 6 a.m. and 7 a.m. — about an hour before the first reports of distress began bubbling and homeless people desperately climbed trees to escape rising waters near the Los Lagos Golf Course.

“When we notice something’s going on and say that within three hours the area will be inundated, it doesn’t mean that after three hours you can start preparing,” said Director Tony Estremera, who represents part of the area that was flooded.

Mayor Sam Liccardo said Thursday he had not seen the district’s email and did not want to comment on it specifically. The mayor said earlier this week that the city relied on information from the water district that indicated the creek could handle 7,400 cubic feet of water a second. That data, he said, turned out to be wrong, and residents should not have learned of the flood danger when rescuers arrived by boat to evacuate them.

“I don’t doubt the water district tried their best to get us accurate information and the information was changing rapidly,” Liccardo said Thursday. “And we’re not trying to point fingers here but some of the emails that they sent that morning were wrong.”

Meanwhile, about 3,800 residents — down from 14,000 — remain affected by mandatory evacuations around William Street Park, the Rock Springs neighborhoods and two mobile home parks along Old Oakland Road.

Others, however, returned home to begin the long process of cleaning up. Weary and worried, they wanted answers.

“They never told us whether we could come back or not. We just did,” William Street resident Jolene Noel said as her 9-year-old daughter swept their driveway and water was pumped from her basement. “They also didn’t tell us when to leave.”

Noel said she wants “real answers” about what happened, but so far has heard “we’ll get back to you.”

“I’d like to know who’s responsible,” she said. “These are people’s lives at stake.”

City officials, meanwhile, are scrambling for state and federal aid to help with cleanup efforts. More rain is expected this weekend, and the city plans to launch a local assistance center Saturday at Shirakawa Community Center, 2072 Lucretia Ave., which they described as a “multi-agency, one-stop center for residents residents and businesses who have been flooded to obtain help.”

In the email sent by the water district hours before the flooding began, officials told the city that the water in the creek was flowing at 6,000 cubic feet per second, earlier than expected, and could rise to 7,000 cubic feet per second and remain there “for a number of hours” and could reach the Rock Springs neighborhood by 6 or 7 a.m. “Are you planning some specific communication related to that,” wrote Jim McGann of the water district.

“I’ll head back in about 5am to check on whether we should further update outreach,” wrote Cheryl Wessling of the city’s Office of Emergency Operations during an email sent at 3:06 a.m. Tuesday. “Is this a minor or major change in what we were expecting?”

McGann responded: “I would say relatively minor, in that it’s a few hours earlier than previously forecast. Heightened awareness, in that if notifying or communicating to the neighborhoods is in the works, it may reach flood levels earlier than expected, too.”

Water district director Dick Santos said the surge should have sounded alarm bells.

“Look, those areas are hot-spots,” he said Thursday. “Anywhere south of Trimble Road, they all can flood down there and they have flooded and we know that if a lot of water is coming it can flood again.

“We did our part — it’s our job to watch the water,” he said. “We don’t send in the police and fire.”

Why the water level flooded at a much lower rate than anticipated could be related to the drought coming to an end with a year that’s on track to be the wettest on record.

“You’ll see vegetation growing out where the water used to be,” said Anthony Guerriero, field office chief for the water division of the U.S. Geological Survey. “There’ll be trees out there, and they love it. And debris is not being washed out.”

Water district spokeswoman Rachael Gibson said the district has a program that keeps the creeks and water channels clear — but only those on water district property. That amounts to about 250 miles out of the 800 miles of county waterways. But Gibson said it doesn’t include the stretch of Coyote Creek at Rock Springs, which was hit hardest by the flooding.

“The City of San Jose owns the creek in that area,” she said. “And each property owner is responsible for clearing their own section.”

San Jose officials on Thursday said they didn’t know if they owned the area, and said researching the matter would take several days. “Our priority is getting people back into their homes,” Vossbrink said.

Assistant City Manager Dave Sykes disagreed with the water district’s assessments and said who does the clean up and maintenance “is an open question.”

“And it’s premature to come to any conclusion that blockage could have caused the flooding,” he said.

Most of the area still under mandatory evacuation sits within a FEMA-designated 100-year floodplain. According to the agency, that means that in any given year there’s a 1 percent chance of a flood.

But water district spokeswoman Gina Adriano said the impacted spots “are low-lying areas prone to flooding during storms much less intense than a 100-year storm.”

That’s another area of disagreement: While the city has labeled the storm a 100-year event, the water district has not. Guerriero of the USGS said that while the flow of Coyote Creek was the highest on record going back to 1991 — he “would not consider this a 100-year event.”

Meanwhile, San Jose Councilman Tam Nguyen, whose district includes Rock Springs, said Vietnamese residents and other ethnic communities were ignored by the city and that no multi-lingual information was disseminated. Packets with information in Spanish and Vietnamese were distributed on Thursday.

“People are frustrated and afraid of the unknown. They would love to hear what help they can get,” Nguyen said. “Today for the first time, I heard the city is working on it. They should have done it before to give people some assurance.”

Liccardo said the city has taken to heart the scores of resident complaints about getting little to no evacuation notice before they were surrounded by rising waters.

“It’s safe to say we’ve learned some lessons and we’re going to be knocking on doors to make sure everybody is aware of what’s going on as soon as it’s apparent there some peril.”

Staff writer Robert Salonga and Paul Rogers contributed to this report.
 

Broccoli

Contributing Member

Another California Lake Two Feet From Breaching! Berryessa Spillway Active!
Published on Feb 24, 2017

Lake Berryessa does something it doesn't do very often.... spill water through its famous Glory Hole.
 
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