California Storm Triggers Mudslides: La Canada Flintridge Evacuated

by wildcherry on Saturday, February 6th, 2010 | Travel, Weather | No Comments

At least 41 homes were seriously damaged and 500 more were ordered evacuated after heavy rains that pours over southern california overflowed debris basins, carried away cement barricades and swept cars into storm drains.

“We’ve got crews going door to door to tell residents to get out,” said Los Angeles County Fire Insp. Frederick Stowers. “Some of the roads up there are a complete mess.”

At least a foot of debris was reported in some houses. Family photographs, furniture and other personal items were spotted among the rocks and debris that flowed into yards and streets.

By midmorning, the rain had tapered off, but forecasters said another storm system was expected Saturday afternoon.

The evacuations were ordered in foothill areas of La Canada Flintridge, La Crescenta and some parts of Acton.

An evacuation center was set up at La Canada Flintridge, and the Red Cross was working to establish other locations to shelter displaced residents.

Crews used bulldozers and other heavy equipment to clear masses of mud and rocks that blocked suburban streets and intersections.

No injuries were reported as a result of the mudslides.

A heavy downpour at sunrise followed a steady overnight rain of nearly 2 inches in a mountainous 250-square-mile scarred by wildfires last summer. The National Weather Service warned of floods likely in foothill areas of Santa Anita, Sierra Madre, Arcadia and Monrovia.

Widespread flooding and downed trees tied up traffic and caused accidents across Los Angeles County.

A section of the Long Beach Freeway was shut down early Saturday because of high water.

Water almost a foot deep flowed into businesses on Melrose Avenue. To the east, Topanga Canyon Boulevard was closed by a rock slide just north of Pacific Coast Highway, and scattered rocks and mud fell on roads in Malibu.

Scattered power outages affected more than 10,000 customers in the Los Angeles area.

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Biggest Snow Storm in Washington DC areas and Mid-Atlantic region

by wildcherry on Saturday, February 6th, 2010 | Travel, Weather | No Comments

WASHINGTON — Life in the nation’s capital ground to a halt Friday as steady snow fell, the beginning of a storm that forecasters said could be the biggest for the city in modern history.

A record 2 1/2 feet or more was predicted for Washington. More than 8 inches had already fallen in some D.C. areas by midnight and 10 inches was reported in Pittsburgh as the blizzard blew into the Mid-Atlantic region, reducing visibility. Big amounts of snow were expected throughout the region.

Authorities blamed the storm for hundreds of accidents and the deaths of father-son Samaritans in Virginia.

Several thousand people in West Virginia and Pennsylvania had lost electricity and more outages were expected. A hospital fire in D.C. sent about three dozen patients scurrying from their rooms to safety in a basement. The blaze started when a snow plow truck caught fire near the building, but no injuries were reported.

The region’s second snowstorm in less than two months could be “extremely dangerous,” the National Weather Service said. Meteorologist Kevin Whitt in Sterling, Va., said 4 inches had fallen in the Baltimore area and forecasters expect snowfall rates to increase overnight, up to 2 inches per hours, until daybreak.

Current snowfall totals have been estimated over 2 or 3 feet in some areas of Virginia and Washington, DC. The snow has created states of emergency in other states including New Jersey as well as Ohio, and yesterday saw numerous businesses and schools closed due to the inclement weather.

It all depends on the area of the country you are in right now.  If you’re adverse to bringing a yardstick outside right now to measure your snowfall amount, you can check out a site by the National Environmental Satellite, Date and Information Service, aka the “NESDIS”.  Their site will give you the latest snowfall totals nationally or by state.  Additionally, the site provides a look at the snowfall depths for the areas.  From this site you can get a decent indication of your current snowfall totals, but you may be seeing more as the weekend continues.

The NESDIS website with snowfall map is located here, with dropdown boxes to choose days/snow depth and your state.

Read More: Huffington Post

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