A region-wide NWS flood watch was scheduled to go into effect from 10 p.m. Monday to 4 a.m. Wednesday. A Monday morning bulletin from the agency suggested that highly saturated soils paired with elevated river and streams levels made more water-related impacts a “sure bet.”
Aside from light showers early in the morning, Monday’s forecast was relatively tame in terms of rainfall and wind throughout the Bay Area. While wind gusts could ramp up to 40 miles per hour or greater around 10 p.m., the bulk of the rain was expected after 1 a.m. Tuesday morning.
In all, San Jose, Livermore and Concord could expect to see between one-half and one inch of rain from Monday evening through Wednesday morning. Expectations were higher in San Francisco, where it could receive as much at one and a half inches of rainfall, and Santa Cruz could expect between two and three.
All eyes remain on the small Monterey County community of Pajaro as the next storm nears, however, after water breached a levee early Saturday morning, devastating the neighborhoods and farmlands of the town. The Monterey County Department of Emergency Management issued shelter in-place orders early Monday at Las Palmas 1, 2 and Indian Springs due to flooding at River Road.
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