Record rains on New Year’s Eve have compromised a levee along the Cosumnes River near Sacramento and left tens of thousands of Californians without power Sunday.
Sacramento County warned Saturday night of “imminent levee failure” on the Cosumnes River around Wilton, urging residents to “seek higher ground immediately. KCRA-TV reported a “double levee breach” on Sunday morning.
Northern California took the brunt of the weekend pounding. Flash flooding kept major roads closed just south of Sacramento on Sunday, including Highway 99. Electricity remained cut off Sunday morning for more than 41,000 customers.
Sunny skies on Sunday offered a respite from the downpours, but another atmospheric river was barreling across the western Pacific and set to drench California in the days ahead.
Oakland had its wettest day since 1970 on Saturday with 4.75 inches of rain. In San Francisco, 5.46 inches of rain fell, making Saturday the city’s second wettest day in more than 170 years, the National Weather Service reported.
The 101 Freeway in south San Francisco was shut down for flooding just as New Year’s Eve revelers were heading out to celebrate, but reopened a few hours before midnight.
While California’s drought remains far from over, the wet weather that closed 2022 has enabled at least a few of the state’s major reservoirs to exceed their historical average water supply.
Water releases from the Folsom and Nimbus dams led state parks officials to warn of safety hazards on Lake Natoma as rapidly rising water levels create dangerously strong currents.
In Los Angeles, where heavy rain fell on New Year’s Eve, forecasters expect rain to return Monday afternoon or evening, followed by a strong Pacific storm with heavy rain and strong winds late Wednesday and Thursday.