California flooding is getting pretty serious

As I write this it’s been pouring rain on and off all morning here in Orange County. Most of the side streets are flooded in my neighborhood and apparently there’s a lightning storm expected later today (something we don’t see here very often). But all of this is pretty minor compared to what some people are experiencing this week. Former talk show host Ellen DeGeneres posted this video of a creek near her home in Montecito, which is located just east of Santa Barbara.

Advertisement

As she mentioned, the entire town was supposed to evacuate.

The entire town of Montecito, California, was told to evacuate as a storm battered the state Monday – the same day the community marked the five-year anniversary of a major mudslide that killed 23 people in 2018.

Residents of Montecito – a small town of only about 8,200 locked between the Santa Ynez Mountains and the Pacific Ocean – fled their homes as heavy rains threatened to bring mudslides and debris flows like the ones that wrought havoc on the Santa Barbara County community five years ago.

In nearby Santa Barbara streets were flooded.

This drain has turned into a fountain.

Advertisement

A lot of streets seem to be underwater.

And this happened in Ventura yesterday.

This is from this morning.

Eighteen people got stranded by the rising river yesterday and had to be rescued.

In a few cases people had to be airlifted out.

Advertisement

In Chatsworth, north of Los Angeles, the heavy rain caused a sinkhole to open up which swallowed two cars.

If you’ve watched many films or TV shows then you’ve probably seen car chases filmed in the LA river which is normally just a concrete area with very little water in it. But not this week.

I don’t recognize the spot but this was apparently in LA last night.

In northern California, the town of Gilroy is also getting swamped.

Advertisement

One side of the freeway had to be shut down for 6 hours yesterday.

And in the Central Valley, east of Fresno, they are also having trouble keeping the highways open.

This is another town east of Fresno:

For most of the state this has been an inconvenience with a loss of power or maybe some risk to property. But 14 Californians have died as a result of this series of storms. Unfortunately, the death toll rose yesterday after a 5-year-old boy was swept away in central California.

A 5-year-old boy was swept away in floodwaters as another powerful storm battered California on Monday, according to local authorities…

The boy’s mother was driving a truck around 7:50 a.m. near San Miguel, a central town roughly 35 miles inland from the coast. The vehicle became stranded in floodwaters while trying to cross a river.

The mother escaped the truck with the help of bystanders, but the boy was swept downstream. A flash flood warning was later issued for the region.

A search for the boy — which involved 17 firefighters, professional divers and a helicopter — uncovered only his shoe, the Cal Fire spokesperson confirmed. The boy has not been declared dead.

Advertisement

This is the second young boy killed in California by this storm. A toddler was killed when a tree fell onto a house last week.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Trending on HotAir Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement