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21.30GMT
Latest weather report suggests rain over Los Angeles could worsen this afternoon
My colleague Gabrielle Canon, the Guardian’s extreme weather correspondent, reports that the rain in Los Angeles, which had let up slightly in the late morning, could worsen through this afternoon:
And that’s not all: new projections from the NWS also suggest the rain could continue through Wednesday, rather than ending on Tuesday:
The newest wrinkle is some projections showing another small low pressure area dropping off the coast on Wednesday and producing another organized band of rain that will sweep through California Wednesday night into Thursday. While any additional rain through the event will be generally light to moderate in intensity…locally heavy but brief downpours (rates of 0.5 to 1.0 inches per hour) are expected…
Key events
6 Feb 202401.09GMT
Evening summary
We are wrapping up live coverage of the storms across California for today. Here’s an updated summary of key events:
All of Los Angeles county, which is home to nearly 10 million people, remains under a flood advisory until 9 pm tonight, as “a continuous stream of moderate/heavy rain” moves into the region. The rain is expected to continue battering southern California into Tuesday.
Downtown LA had seen more than seven inches of rain in the past three days, while other neighborhoods, including Bel Air, had seen nearly 12 inches, according to the National Weather Service (NWS). The NWS said that flash flooding and threat of mudslides have created “a particularly dangerous situation”.
The intense weather has triggered mud and debris flows in the Hollywood Hills and the Santa Monica mountains. Firefighters reported helping evacuate several homes in multiple neighborhoods after mud, rocks and trees flowed into residences.
Some local activists in Los Angeles, where an estimated 50,000 people live in tents, vehicles, and improvised encampments, said they were struggling to find space in the city’s shelter system for people exposed to the brutal weather on the city’s streets.
Across California, early 300,000 homes and businesses remain without power and more than one million people are likely being impacted by the outages. The outages have largely been concentrated in northern California, which was hit hard by storms on Sunday.
Authorities are investigating at least three deaths in northern California that appear to be related to the extreme weather. A man in Yuba City was found dead under a tree, a person in Santa Cruz county died after a tree fell onto their residence, and a 42-year-old man in Carmichael, near Sacramento, also died after a tree fell on him Sunday.
In southern California, Los Angeles public schools remained opened despite the weather, and Disneyland also welcomed visitors, though it once again closed earlier than usual in the evening.
6 Feb 202400.48GMT
The photos are dramatic. But sometimes the LA River just looks like that.
For most of the day, one of the leading images on the Guardian’s home page has been the brown, choppy waters of the Los Angeles river, seemingly about to fully swallow the trunks of nearby trees.
Photos and footage of the river have been splashed across multiple news sites: a video of the rushing waters, flowing high up on the river’s concrete banks, has been at the top of the New York Times for most of the day. I saw “LA River” trending on Twitter/X.
But as someone who once lived next to the river, I must tell you: when it’s raining, this is pretty much what the LA river is supposed to look like.
Those trees drowning in the river? A lot of them are willows and cottonwoods, floodplain plants that spread their seeds through floodwater, Jon Christensen of UCLA’s Institute of the Environment and Sustainability told me.
“As long as the river doesn’t go over its banks and flood the surrounding neighborhoods, this is the modern LA River doing its job,” Christensen said.
A spokesperson for the Army Corps of Engineers in Los Angeles confirmed on Monday afternoon that “the Los Angeles River is currently operating as it was intended,” that local dams are performing “without incident”, and that current water levels “are trending downward”, meaning the risk of flooding is also going down.
6 Feb 202400.11GMT
Four missing people located after avalanche hits ski resort outside Los Vegas
The Las Vegas police said they had located four people who had been reported missing after an avalanche hit a ski resort in Nevada.
The Los Angeles Times reported that the avalanche had occurred at the Lee Canyon ski resort, 50 miles from Las Vegas, and that it was connected to the west coast storms that have brought heavy rains to coastal areas, and snow to more mountainous regions.
5 Feb 202423.51GMT
More than 300,000 in California still without power
Earlier today, more than 500,000 households and businesses were still without power in California, according to poweroutage.us. By 3.30pm PST, that number had fallen to nearly 332,000 households and businesses, many of them concentrated in northern California. There were high numbers of outages in Mendocino and Sonoma counties, north of San Francisco, as well as south of San Francisco, in the Silicon Valley counties of Santa Clara and San Mateo.
5 Feb 202423.40GMT
NWS: While peak flood risk has declined in LA, flood advisories have been extended
“A continuous stream of moderate/heavy rain will be moving into LA county,” the National Weather Service is advising, resulting in an extension of the local flood advisory, and warnings of “widespread flooding of roadways and small streams”.
In the bigger picture, though: “The risk of flooding has lowered some since the peak last night.”
5 Feb 202423.11GMT
LA activists describe struggle to connect unhoused people with shelter in the storm
When Los Angeles is pummeled with intense amounts of rain, the people at the greatest risk are the estimated 50,000 local residents who are unsheltered, living outside in tents, cars or makeshift encampments. Despite Los Angeles’ typically warm climate, deaths due to exposure are a serious risk: fourteen unhoused people died of hypothermia here in 2021.
While Los Angeles county does open severe weather shelters during periods of dangerous weather, getting a place in one of those shelters is not always easy.
KTownforAll, a local advocacy organization focused on homelessness, described the problems its volunteers encountered when they tried to help a local woman find a bed in a shelter this past weekend:
The 211 operator “clearly felt bad” and “gave us three more phone numbers to try, just in case”, the activists said. But when they called those numbers, they found yet more hurdles:
Read the full thread here.
5 Feb 202422.43GMT
As storms continue, Los Angeles tallies up new rainfall records
Our extreme weather reporter Gabrielle Canon flags a new record at UCLA:
5 Feb 202422.38GMT
Video: heavy storm in California downs trees and floods roads
California is being drenched by a giant atmospheric river-fueled storm that has caused record levels of rain, dangerous flooding and violent winds that knocked out power to hundreds of thousands.
Nearly 38 million people are under flood alerts across the state and into Arizona, including about 10 million people in Los Angeles county. At least three people have reportedly died because of the storm, struck by felled trees that toppled on to or around their homes.
5 Feb 202422.22GMT
Disneyland, open during today’s storm, will close early this evening
Southern California’s Magic Kingdom park was still open to visitors today, despite the weather, but will be closing early tonight, at 8pm rather than at 10pm, according to the OC Register’s dedicated theme park reporter:
Disneyland had closed an hour early on Sunday night as storms raged across California.
5 Feb 202422.08GMT
Third reported California storm death is 42-year-old man near Sacramento
Local news outlets are reporting a third storm-related death in Northern California: a 42-year-old man from Carmichael, who died after a tree fell on him on Sunday.
Two previous storm-related deaths have been reported in California: a man in Yuba City was found dead under a tree, and a person in Santa Cruz county died after a tree fell onto their residence.
5 Feb 202422.01GMT
More photos of mudslides in Beverly Crest area of Los Angeles
We reported earlier today on mudslides burying cars in Beverly Crest, a Los Angeles neighborhood north of Beverly Hills. Fifteen people, including nine children, were evacuated from homes in Beverly Crest where debris flows damaged six homes, the Los Angeles fire department had said.
The Associated Press has more images of multiple vehicles sunk in the mud.
5 Feb 202421.30GMT
Latest weather report suggests rain over Los Angeles could worsen this afternoon
My colleague Gabrielle Canon, the Guardian’s extreme weather correspondent, reports that the rain in Los Angeles, which had let up slightly in the late morning, could worsen through this afternoon:
And that’s not all: new projections from the NWS also suggest the rain could continue through Wednesday, rather than ending on Tuesday:
The newest wrinkle is some projections showing another small low pressure area dropping off the coast on Wednesday and producing another organized band of rain that will sweep through California Wednesday night into Thursday. While any additional rain through the event will be generally light to moderate in intensity…locally heavy but brief downpours (rates of 0.5 to 1.0 inches per hour) are expected…
5 Feb 202421.22GMT
Sunday was ‘tenth wettest day’ in LA history, mayor says
This is Lois Beckett, picking up our live news coverage in Los Angeles.
Los Angeles mayor Karen Bass said during a news conference that Sunday was “tenth wettest day in the history of this city”, going back to 1877, the year when current rain-tracking records began.
“Stay safe and off the roads. Only leave your house if it is absolutely necessary,” she urged city residents.
First responders had been working around the clock to respond to the storm, she said.
“We have had to rescue individuals in certain neighborhoods because they did not follow the evacuation orders,” Bass said. “We ask that when notified that you need to evacuate, please do that so you do not end up needing to be rescued.”
5 Feb 202421.06GMT
Midday summary
Here’s what we’ve seen so far today from the major atmospheric river-fueled storm that is unfolding in California:
About 1.4 million people in the Los Angeles area, including the Hollywood Hills and Beverly Hills, were under a flash flood warning on Monday morning. All of Los Angeles county, which is home to nearly 10 million people, was under a flood advisory.
The rain is expected to continue battering southern California into Tuesday. Up to 9in of rain had already fallen in the area, and more was expected, according to the National Weather Service. The NWS said that flash flooding and threat of mudslides have created “a particularly dangerous situation.”
The intense weather has triggered mud and debris flows in the Hollywood Hills and the Santa Monica mountains. Firefighters reported helping evacuate several homes in multiple neighborhoods after mud, rocks and trees flowed into residences.
Nearly 400,000 homes and businesses are currently without power and more than one million people are likely being impacted by the outages. The outages have largely been concentrated in northern California, which was hit hard by storms on Sunday.
Authorities are investigating two deaths that appear to be related to the extreme weather. A man in Yuba City was found dead under a tree and a person in Santa Cruz county died after a tree fell onto their residence.
My colleague Lois Beckett will have more on the storm, so stay tuned.
5 Feb 202421.00GMT
It appears that power is being restored in some areas
Nearly 400,000 homes and businesses are without power across the state, according to poweroutage.us. That’s down from Monday morning when more than 500,000 customers were experiencing outages. Still, the outages are likely impacting more than one million people in the state.
Pacific Gas and Electric, which serves nearly half of all Californians, said it had restored power to about 765,000 of its customers since Sunday. The storm was one of the most damaging on record, the utility said.
“In terms of outage totals, this was one of the top three most damaging, single-day storms on record, only comparable to storms 2008 and 1995,” Sumeet Singh, the company’s chief operating officer said on Monday. “We understand how difficult it is to be without electricity. Please know we are here to support you and we will not rest until the lights are back on.”
5 Feb 202420.46GMT
An avalanche warning has been issued for the central Sierra Nevada, including around Lake Tahoe, as the region sees an “intense pulse of snowfall” that will likely bring another foot of snow.
“This combined with strong winds will fuel ongoing snowpack instability and keep natural avalanches very likely today,” the Sierra Avalanche Center said in a statement.
The region has been battered by intense winds in recent days. The ski resort Palisades Tahoe saw a wind gust of 148mph on Sunday, according to Accuweather.
The warning comes just a month after an avalanche at a Lake Tahoe ski resort left one person dead.
5 Feb 202420.21GMT
Another debris flow has been reported in Los Angeles
Fifteen people, including nine children, were evacuated from homes in Beverly Crest where debris flows damaged six homes, the Los Angeles fire department said.
Footage from the scene showed dense mud that buried at least one vehicle.
5 Feb 202419.52GMT
Firefighters in southern California have rescued people trapped in cars and along rivers amid harrowing conditions.
In Riverside county, crews rescued two people and their dogs who were stranded on the riverbottom early Monday morning, and just hours later rescued two more people from another area of the river.
Firefighters in San Bernardino county rescued three people from a tree after they attempted to cross a flooded road and water flooded their vehicle.
The governor’s office of emergency services stationed water rescue teams with fire departments and counties across the state in preparation for the extreme weather.
Brian Ferguson, the office’s deputy director of crisis communications, has described the situation as “a significant threat to the safety of Californians”.