Following a week of storms that claimed 12 lives in the state of California, United States President Joe Biden has approved the designation of national emergency.
Biden stated that the emergency designation will provide the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) permission to coordinate disaster relief operations and mobilize emergency resources.
In the past 10 days, severe weather spawned violent wind gusts that toppled trucks, flooded the streets of small towns along northern California’s coast, and churned up a storm surge that destroyed a pier in Santa Cruz.
California Governor Gavin Newsom on Sunday announced that he would ask the Biden administration to declare a federal emergency to support California’s ongoing storm response.
Newsom said the state needed support amid an unrelenting wave of brutal storms that left hundreds of thousands of Californians without power.
Amid high winds and heavy rains, the worst of the storms is forecast to hit on Monday.
During a winter storm update Sunday, Newsom said to expect the worst of the storm and “very intense weather” in the next 48 hours.
“Don’t test fate,” Newsom said during the Sunday update. “Just a foot of water and your car’s floating, you know, half a foot of water and you’re off your feet”.
More than half of Sacramento’s 530,000 residents were in the dark at the height of the storm Sunday, victimized by wind gusts of up to 60 mph that toppled trees and tangled power lines, the Sacramento Municipal Utility District said.
“Atmospheric river events” will continue to batter California through early this week with likely the most potent system arriving Monday, the National Weather Service said.
Additional rain on saturated soils will lead to considerable flooding, mudslides, and burn scar debris flows, the weather service said.
Widespread mountain snow and high winds will add to weather issues across the state, the statement warned.
“This could be a deadly situation and the storm will likely be a billion-dollar disaster,” tweeted AccuWeather meteorologist Ariella Scalese.
“Several more inches of rain, mudslides/landslides. In addition, feet of snow above 6,500 feet and wind gusts exceeding 100 mph”