Approximately 13 million people are monitoring flood clocks throughout California. It is expected that heavy rains will flood floods, landslides, and fragments until Wednesday.
The moisture atmosphere aims at the north and central areas that affect cities such as San Francisco and Sacramento. Then move to the south and move to Los Angeles.
The National Weather Service warned that two storms are expected to affect the central and southern states this week, including San Luis Obispo, Ventura, and Los Angeles.
On Monday, heavy rain crosses the Northern California, where cities such as Chico, Ureca, Reading, and Santa Rosa may experience floods.
The Meteorological Bureau stated on Monday morning that the weather forecast center drew excessive rainfall “slight risks” throughout the Northern California until the beginning of Tuesday.
The heavy rain axis moves to the Bay Area on Tuesday, causing concerns about San Francisco and Sacramento floods.
By Wednesday, some heavy downpour may affect Los Angeles through the first half of the day. This is a few days after the announcement that the Eaton and Parisade’s mountain fire that killed at least 29 people were confined.
Officials in Los Angeles County have announced aggressive measures before the storm, warning that residents will secure property on land and provide information about the next storm.
“Los Angeles County has worked 24 hours to confirm that this storm preparation, cleaning of the debris basin, reinforcing infrastructure, and that residents have the resources needed to maintain safety.” Third district.
The whole Southern California has a maximum rain of 1 inch in Los Angeles, and the mountains can be 2-4 inches.
Strawberry Valley is 9.96 inches and a higher coastal range and an additional 5-10 -inch rainfall in the hills of the North Sierra, including the 6.24 inches of Campon Building.
