Rainy weather returns
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Alicia Robinson
More rain was predicted to moisten Orange County beginning Tuesday
night and tapering off late this afternoon or this evening.
The latest storm was expected to drop about half an inch to an
inch of rain on Newport-Mesa with another rainstorm likely to hit the
area Friday, said Stan Wasowski, a forecaster with the National
Weather Service in San Diego.
The area has largely recovered from its recent drenching, and
because the ground has dried out a little, no major problems are
anticipated from upcoming storms.
“We’re not expecting too much in the way of excessive water
standing in the roadways,” Wasowski said. “It will help recharge some
of the groundwater throughout the area and the reservoirs are filling
up.”
In Costa Mesa, city workers have been cleaning storm-drain catch
basins to prevent flooding from future rains, city engineer Ernesto
Munoz said.
“In the previous storms, we fortunately did not experience any
heavy damage or eroded roadways,” he said.
“We fully recovered from what has occurred in the past, and we’re
ready to see the next storms come through.”
Sandbags are available for residents at the Placentia fire
station, and city crews carry barricades in case any road lanes are
flooded and need to be closed. Residents should remember to shut off
automatic lawn sprinklers, Munoz said.
Previous rains caused a few minor slope failures in the Spy Glass
Hill area, but otherwise, Newport Beach is in good shape, city Public
Works Director Steve Badum said.
Because groundwater levels are so high, he said, “we’re getting a
lot of folks calling and saying ‘Hey, there’s water oozing out of the
sidewalk, or there’s water oozing out of my front yard.’”
Newport also cleans its catch basins before major storms, and a
few areas in Buck Gully and Morning Canyon are being monitored for
erosion.
Rain levels for the past six months are significantly higher than
the same period the previous year. In January 2005 alone, 5.78 inches
of rain have fallen, compared with a 30-year average rainfall for
this period of 2.13 inches, Wasowski said.
More precipitation could mean more rain advisories from the Orange
County Health Care Agency, which posted advisories not to swim at the
county’s beaches from Dec. 28 to Jan. 18 because of previous storms.
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