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Full Storm Ready 2024 Series: Northern California lessons learned after last year’s severe weather

Full Storm Ready 2024 Series: Northern California lessons learned after last year’s severe weather
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA FROM HEAVY RAIN IN SACRAMENTO COUNTY TO FLOODWATERS IN AMADOR COUNTY. SOME COMMUNITIES ACROSS NORTHERN CALIFORNIA WENT THROUGH HEAVY RAIN AND FLOODING ALL THIS WEEK. WE’RE LOOKING BACK TO SHOW YOU HOW AGENCIES ARE NOW CHANGING THEIR PROTOCOLS BECAUSE OF THOSE EVENTS. TONIGHT, KCRA 3’S GULSTAN DART STARTS OUR COVERAGE WITH A LOOK AT HOW THOSE STORMS UNFOLDED. THIS IS WHERE THEY DO ALL THE RAINFALL FORECASTING. A LOT OF FACTORS GO INTO FORECASTING. SO HE’S LOOKING AT A LOT OF YOU KNOW WEATHER MODELS AND OTHER INFORMATION TO KIND OF GET A SENSE OF WHAT’S GOING ON OUT THERE AT THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE, THIS TEAM IS PREDICTING RIVER LEVELS STATEWIDE. IT CAN BE COMPLICATED. AND HYDROLOGIST BRETT WHITEN KNOWS THE ONLY THING CERTAIN IS UNCERTAINTY. STORMS DON’T ALWAYS PLAY OUT EXACTLY HOW WE HAVE THEM FORECAST. THIS IS THE SCENE HERE WITH THE FLOODING AND THE RUSHING WATERS. THERE ARE STILL TWO PEOPLE THAT ARE STRANDED OUT THERE ON DILLARD ROAD. THE TREE FELL ON TOP OF THIS CAR HERE. THIS IS THE MOST OUTAGES THAT WE HAVE SEEN ALL NIGHT. THIS EVENT WAS PRETTY ANOMALOUS IN TERMS OF HOW DIFFERENT THINGS PLAYED OUT COMPARED TO WHAT THE FORECAST WAS SHOWING NEW YEAR’S EVE, THE HEAVY RAIN STARTED WITH RISING CREEKS AND STREET FLOODING. IT’S JUST DESTROYING EVERYTHING. IT’S ALL UP UNDERNEATH THE HOUSE IN EL DORADO COUNTY, PEOPLE IN CAMERON PARK WERE TOLD TO GET OUT AS WATER RUSHED THROUGH SOME NEIGHBORHOODS. WE’RE EXPECTING IT TO BE SIMILAR AT MODERATE AT THE BEGINNING, AND THEN WE’RE REALLY KIND OF RAMP UP TOWARD THE END OF THE EVENT. BUT WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENED WAS WE GOT INTENSE RAINFALL FROM THE BEGINNING BY THAT NIGHT IN SACRAMENTO COUNTY, WATER WAS. COVERING DILLARD ROAD IN THE WILTON AREA. WE STARTED GETTING THOSE HEAVY, HEAVY PERIODS OF INTENSE RAINFALL AND THEIR RIVER WAS RISING FASTER AND HIGHER THAN WHAT WE ANTICIPATED. UM, THAT’S LITERALLY WHEN WE WERE STARTING TO KIND OF GET CONCERNED. THE WIND PICKED UP WITH GUSTS OVER 60 MILES AN HOUR IN SOME SPOTS, TREES STARTED FALLING, AND BY TEN THAT NIGHT, MORE THAN 170,000 SMUD CUSTOMERS WERE IN THE DARK. THIS MASSIVE TREE CAUGHT IN THE POWER LINES HERE. NEW YEAR’S DAY HOMEOWNERS WOKE UP TO MORE FLOODING. THIS IS PROBABLY BECAUSE THIS IS PRETTY CLOSE TO THE RIVER. UM, SO THIS IS AN AREA, A HOUSE THAT PROBABLY HAS HAD, UM, GONE THROUGH THIS BEFORE. CHIEF METEOROLOGIST MARK FINAN FLEW OVER SOUTHEAST SACRAMENTO COUNTY IN LIVECOPTER3 THREE. THOSE ARE IN DEEP, MUDDY WATER. YEAH. IT’S. YEAH. LOOK AT LOOK AT THAT. CARS WERE STUCK IN THE WATER ALONG HIGHWAY 99, LEAVING FIRSTRILLIONESPONDERS SCRAMBLING. I’VE WORKED FOR THE COSUMNES FIRE DEPARTMENT OR PREVIOUSLY, THE ELK GROVE FIRE DEPARTMENT FOR 21 YEARS. THIS IS THE MOST SIGNIFICANT FLOODING I’VE SEEN IN THIS AREA. THREE PEOPLE WERE FOUND DEAD FOLLOWING THE FLOODING. IT WAS AN EXTREME EVENT IN TERMS OF PRECIPITATION, AND IT WAS IN THE RIVERS TO FALLING TREES. ALSO PROVED DANGEROUS IN SACRAMENTO AND SAN STOCKTON TREES CRUSHED CARS AND HOMES CLEAN UP AND REPAIRS WOULD TAKE MONTHS, WITH CREWS WOOD CHIPPING, HUGE MOUNDS OF TREES AT LAND PARK, FILLING IN BREACH LEVEES NEAR WILTON WITH BIG BOULDERS AND REPLACING HUNDREDS OF POWER POLES THAT WERE DAMAGED OR DESTROYED. LOOKING AHEAD TO THE NEW YEAR, WE’RE STILL LOOKING AT LOW LEVELS IN THE COSUMNES, WIGHTON SAYS HE HAS ONE MAJOR TAKEAWAY, JUST THAT SOMETIMES YOU HAVE TO EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED. SOMETIMES THE FLOODS CAN EVOLVE VERY, VERY FAST. YOU KNOW THAT BE AWARE, BE COGNIZANT OF WHAT THE FORECASTS ARE LOOKING LIKE SO THAT YOU CAN, YOU KNOW, STAY UP, UP TO DATE ABOUT HOW THINGS ARE CHANGING THROUGHOUT THE EVENT. THIS WEEK IN OUR FIVE PART SERIES, STORM READY 2024, WE WILL LOOK AT THE LESSONS LEARNED FROM LAST JANUARY STORMS AND HOW THEY’RE NOW PROMPTING AGENCY IN THIS REGION TO MAKE CHANGES. PLUS NEW NUMBERS SHOWING THE HUGE SCOPE OF THOSE STORMS. AGAIN, OUR SERIES IS CALLED STORM READY 2024, AND YOU CAN SE
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Full Storm Ready 2024 Series: Northern California lessons learned after last year’s severe weather

It’s been one year since severe storms hit Northern California and caused deadly flooding, mass power outages and downed trees across the region.

For the first week of 2024, KCRA 3’s Storm Ready Series looked back at what happened and how local agencies have changed protocol because of the storms.

In the video above, a National Weather Service forecaster describes one takeaway from the storms as being "to expect the unexpected." (Read more here.)

See more coverage from the series in the videos below.

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'Very different from anything we've experienced': SMUD uses lessons from January storms to improve

The Sacramento Municipal Utility District says that it now has a new benchmark for severe winter weather following the unprecedented damage caused by last January's storms.


According to SMUD, 600,000 customers experienced an outage over a several-week span beginning on New Year's Eve.

To restore power, the utility had to replace more than 425 poles. SMUD Chief Operating Officer Frankie McDermott said that was about a third of the replacements done in a typical year.

"This was different. This was very different from anything we've experienced," he said.

The January 2023 storms are now the new high water mark for the kind of damage that the utility will be ready for in the future.

Read more
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City of Sacramento reflects on lessons learned 1 year after a series of damaging winter storms

One year after a series of storms brought down hundreds of trees, the city of Sacramento is reflecting on lessons learned and building on its plans for emergency response.

The first round of damaging winds to hit the city in 2023 swept through the metro area on New Year's Eve. A gust of 64 mph was recorded at Sacramento's Executive Airport.

The city's director of emergency management, Daniel Bowers, recalled being surprised by the number of trees that came down.

"We had several hundred trees. The total number is unknown because a lot of them fell on private property as well," Bowers said.

Just one week later, strong thunderstorms caused more damage and further complicated things for crews working on clean-up.

About 3,000 service calls came into Sacramento's Urban Forestry Department during a three-week stretch in January.

That is more than three times what the department typically receives in six months.

"It was an all-hands-on-deck situation," Bowers said.

Bowers said he and his team are making sure that more hands are ready to help in the next disaster.

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A year later, Acampo residents are still cleaning up from flooding

This January, the Arbor Mobile Home Park in Acampo is dry. The streets are clear. It's a far different scene than a year ago.

"It was just like a lake,” resident Melissa Youdall recalled of her San Joaquin County community being inundated by floodwaters in January 2023.

Youdall still can't believe how fast the water came up.

"It was horrible," she said.

Heavy rain, combined with a failed pump system, created a mess. Water filled the streets and forced residents out of their homes for days. Rescue crews came in boats to get residents to safety.

"We had to replace everything down here,” Youdall said while pointing at the siding on the bottom of her home. “It's still in the process of being replaced and I was probably one of the last people to get FEMA money.”

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January 2023's storms were deadly for Northern California. Were first responders prepared?

During the winter months of 2023, severe storms and widespread flooding led to the deaths of three people in Sacramento County.

Crews also performed dozens of rescues after people were trapped in their cars during months of heavy rain.

The rain and snow, storm damage, outages, deaths and injuries prompted conversations about what happened during the storms, how agencies were prepared — or weren't — for them, and the lessons learned for the winter of 2024.

In order to learn more about how the storm was handled, in November 2023, KCRA 3 Investigates requested information from Caltrans about staffing, planned road closures and internal memos before the storm. The agency requested extra time to fulfill the request and we haven’t received the information more than two months later.

KCRA 3 Investigates also requested information from the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office about staffing, planned road closures and internal memos related to the storm. The agency also requested extra time, and we haven’t received the information more than two months later.

Read more.