Power outages, flooding hit northern California due to massive storm

'The Pineapple Express' came barreling into the northern California coast Thursday morning, causing transportation delays and school cancellations.

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Eric Risberg/AP
Traffic moves slowly across the Golden Gate Bridge in the high winds and rain Thursday, Dec. 11, 2014, in this view from Sausalito, Calif. A storm expected to be one of the windiest and rainiest in five years swept across the San Francisco Bay Area on Thursday, knocking out power to tens to thousands and delaying travel by air, train and ferry. Pacific Gas & Electric is reporting outages are widespread across the Bay Area due to weather, but officials weren't immediately available to give a specific number of outages.

A powerful storm churned through Northern California Thursday, knocking out power to tens of thousands and delaying commuters while soaking the region with much-needed rain.

Waves slammed onto waterfronts, ferries were bound to their docks, many schools cancelled classes and the gusting winds had motorists tightly gripping their steering wheels on the Golden Gate Bridge, where managers created a buffer zone to prevent head-on collisions by swerving cars.

The iconic suspension bridge is engineered to swing in cross winds, and engineers were standing by, but "the concern we have right now is more about vehicles," spokeswoman Priya David Clemens said.

Pacific Gas & Electric reported more than 80,000 outages due to a single flooded substation in San Francisco, but blackouts were much more widespread. The utility's online map showed lights out over thousands of square miles, from Humboldt near the Oregon border to Big Sur on the Central Coast.

"It's a two-pronged punch — it's wind and rain. Once the ground gets saturated and the winds are howling, there's a bigger chance of trees going down on power lines," said National Weather Service forecaster Diana Henderson in Monterey.

This "Pineapple Express" storm blowing southward down the coast was unusual not only for its force, but for its warmth: San Francisco was a balmy 60 degrees, about 5 degrees above average for this time of year, so many people were taking it in stride.

"I know it's a big storm supposedly, but they're treating it like it's a hurricane," said Malcolm Oubre, who works as an administrative assistant in San Francisco. It's just "lots of rain, lots of wind."

Commuters straggled into work. Most trains were delayed on the Bay Area Rapid Transit system, which carries 400,000 riders daily through tunnels under the bay to the region's urban core. Flooding closed the San Bruno station south of San Francisco, and a power outage closed the busy Montgomery station downtown.

Ferry departures were canceled, keeping tourists from visiting Alcatraz Island, and San Francisco's Embarcadero waterfront was flooded and closed from its baseball park to the attractions on Pier 39.

Many flights at San Francisco International Airport were delayed or canceled. Elaine Silver got in with her husband from Canada for a medical conference just ahead of the storm, after a 10-hour layover in Toronto due to snow. Then they woke up without power in their San Francisco hotel.

"This is a piece of cake," she said, dressed in rain gear as they wandered around the abandoned city.

East Coast kids revel in snow days, but closures are rare on the West Coast, so the cancellation of Thursday's classes was a novelty for dozens of schools in San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley, and Santa Cruz County.

Surfers welcomed the forecast of big, choppy waves with swells topping 15 feet, and ski resorts in the northern Sierra Nevada were hoping for more than 2 feet of snow.

Still, the storm rattled many people, and forecasters warned the impact could get worse. Mudslides were possible, especially in areas affected by this year's wildfires, and with as much as 8 inches of rain falling, rivers and creeks were rising fast.

In California's agricultural heartland, farmers need this good dousing — and many more — to make up for a severe drought caused by three consecutive dry years. This year's above-average rainfall has been welcome, but even this storm alone won't restore reservoirs to normal levels.

James McFarlane, a third-generation farmer in Fresno County, said the storm will provide "some Mother Nature-dictated time off out in the field," but rain this time of year makes for bigger fruit and better prices.

Northern Californians were warned days in advance of the coming storm, and many got ready: By Wednesday night some stores announced they had run out of water, batteries and flashlights, and some cities tweeted that they had no sandbags or sand left.

High winds and heavy rains caused flooding and landslides in the Pacific Northwest on Wednesday, and the southward-moving storm was expected to pound parts of Southern California Thursday evening.

Riverside County authorities ordered everyone to evacuate an apartment complex in San Jacinto, concerned about potential mud flows.

Nevada and Idaho, Arizona and New Mexico could get rain and snow, but nothing like what California is seeing, forecasters said.

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