『San Diego Recovers from Historic Storms as Toreros Face Saint Mary's』のカバーアート

San Diego Recovers from Historic Storms as Toreros Face Saint Mary's

San Diego Recovers from Historic Storms as Toreros Face Saint Mary's

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

このコンテンツについて

Good morning, this is San Diego Local Pulse for Sunday, January fourth.

We're still recovering from what's being called the wettest New Year's Day ever recorded in our city. Just three days ago, a Pacific storm system dumped record-breaking rainfall across San Diego County. Palomar Mountain saw more than five and a quarter inches of rain in a single day, with areas like El Cajon, Campo, and Chula Vista all hitting their highest daily rainfall records. The intensity overwhelmed our drainage systems, and major roads like Fashion Valley and Mission Valley turned into raging rivers. Emergency crews worked around the clock pulling stranded drivers from floodwaters. More than five hundred residents had to be evacuated to emergency shelters, and we saw over a hundred and twenty vehicle incidents reported on January first alone. Hundreds of homes sustained minor to moderate damage, particularly on their first floors. Economic losses are estimated in the millions of dollars, with businesses still closed and roads only now becoming passable. Schools and government offices stayed closed through January second due to the continued flooding. The state of emergency has been extended through today, January fourth, and authorities are asking residents to avoid non-essential travel, especially in low-lying areas.

On a different note, the San Diego Toreros basketball team hosts Saint Mary's today, looking to break a three-game losing streak. The Gaels come in with a nine and seven record, so it should be a competitive matchup for our Toreros.

Looking at the rest of our weather today, we're still dealing with lingering showers. Rain could fall overnight into early morning hours, with heavier amounts coming later tonight and into Monday. But don't worry, these totals won't come anywhere near what we just experienced. Most areas will see between half an inch and an inch of rain cumulatively through Wednesday. Highs today will reach the low sixties on the coast and upper sixties inland. Temperatures will stay slightly cooler than average, but we're expecting drier and clearer skies starting Thursday with mostly sunny conditions. By next weekend, we should see mostly sunny skies and temperatures climbing just a couple degrees above average.

As we continue moving forward from this historic storm, our city is focusing on strengthening infrastructure and improving early warning systems to better handle extreme weather events like this in the future. Community members have shown incredible solidarity, with neighbors helping neighbors evacuate elderly residents and children as waters rose around them.

This has been San Diego Local Pulse. Thank you for tuning in, and please subscribe for more local updates. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease dot ai.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai

Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
まだレビューはありません