By early Tuesday, light rain and snow was still falling in northern parts of California and the lone remaining flood warning was in Sonoma County north of San Francisco, where stream levels were slow to fall.
The National Weather Service called preliminary rainfall totals from the storm “staggering.” Four inches fell Sunday in downtown San Francisco, making it the fourth-wettest day on record for the city. Along the state’s central coast, nearly 5.4 inches of rain was recorded at California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo County. In Southern California, 1.1 inches fell in Beverly Hills.Interstate 80, the major highway through the Sierra Nevada Mountains to Reno, Nevada, was closed by heavy snow early Monday. In California’s Colusa and Yolo counties, state highways 16 and 20 were shut for several miles because of mudslides, the state Department of Transportation said.
“While this rain is welcome, it comes with these hazards, and it won’t necessarily end the drought,” Mankin said. “California still needs more precipitation, and it really needs it in high elevations and spread out over a longer time so it’s not hazardous.” The Caldor Fire has burned for more than two months and in early September prompted the unprecedented evacuation of the entire city of South Lake Tahoe, a major tourism destination. Firefighters now consider the fire fully contained. That status also now applies to the Dixie Fire, the second-largest in state history at just under 1,563 square miles .
Heavy rainfalls needs to be harvested by letting flood plains overflow and in general slow the water speed. Instead wetlands have been drained, rivers have been straightened and even lined with concrete.
Weather is not climate
And what kind of dent it'll make in the perfect (self fulfilling) example liberals have in their story of climate change
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