Mostly warm across US, significant California flood threat
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Flood watch extended for Bay Area, Central Coast
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A sweeping flood watch stretching more than 800 miles along California’s coast and interior plains is in effect this week atmospheric rivers move through.
Unsellable homes, families spending Christmas in rented accommodation and retailers fighting to recover losses on tens of thousands of pounds from damaged stock. This is the reality in Monmouth after devastating floods hit the town just over a month ago.
The NWS Sacramento CA released a flash flood warning at 4:43 p.m. on Sunday in effect until 10:45 p.m. for Shasta County.
A Level 2 out of 4 flash flood threat remains for Northern California through Tuesday, as the first of a series of storms begins to pick up where this weekend's atmospheric river left off. It is forecast to come ashore and bring heavy rain and powerful wind gusts beginning Tuesday afternoon.
State officials say the recent deluge highlighted the need for projects to protect communities from floods. The Trump administration has tried to cut funding for some of them.
The National Weather Service issued the flash flood warning on Monday due to a levee breach in Tukwila, a suburb of Seattle located in King County. An evacuation notice is in effect for parts of King County.
Marin Coastal Range, Sonoma Coastal Range, North Bay Interior Mountains, Coastal North Bay including Point Reyes National Seashore and North Bay Interior Valleys were placed under a flood watch by
Freeway north of LA is the focus of a flood watch issued at 5:51 a.m. on Monday by the National Weather Service. The watch is valid from Tuesday 4 p.m. until Wednesday Dec. 24, at 10 p.m.
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Parents are divided on whether their girls should return to flood-scarred Camp Mystic in Texas
By SEAN MURPHY Patrick Hotze’s three daughters made it home safe from Camp Mystic after July’s catastrophic floods that killed 25 campers and two teenage counselors. He attended some
The National Weather Service (NWS) is warning of an extreme flood threat for Downtown Los Angeles, the San Fernando Valley, as well as parts of Ventura and Santa Barbara counties, beginning on Christmas Eve through Christmas Day.
The King County Department of Natural Resources and Parks (DNRP) highlighted its Flood Patrol team on Tuesday, a round-the-clock group that has monitored levees with the potential of breaking during the recent floods in the past weeks.