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  • Recommended: Rebirth after the big storm: How one small town dug out, spruced up and lived on
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  • 18
    Feb
    2013
    7:40am, EST

    26 injured as snow sparks crashes on I-95 in Connecticut

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Another round of howling winds and blowing snow punished parts of New England, with at least 26 people hurt in collisions that forced the closure of busy Interstate 95 on Sunday.

    More than a dozen collisions damaged 30 cars along a two-exit stretch of I-95 near West Haven, Conn., NBCConnecticut.com reported. Police closed both sides of the East Coast's primary north-south route for two hours.

    As the storm system pushed north, it left a stretch along the northern border from upstate New York to the east coast of Maine bracing for bitterly cold wind chills and more snow, according to the National Weather Service. Eastern Maine faced a blizzard warning until 4 p.m. ET Monday.

    Winds were predicted to gust up to 50 mph, causing wind chills approaching 30 degrees below zero. Blowing snow was likely to create white-out conditions and produce drifts up to several feet high, the weather service said. 

    More from NBCConnecticut.com

    The second blizzard in as many weeks is hitting the Northeast. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

    In addition to Maine, parts of New York, Vermont and New Hampshire were under similar advisories, with wind chills of nearly 30 below possible in higher elevations.

    Weather.com predicted that the wind would be a much bigger problem than snow, with only an additional inch or two expected. Such snows are "not particularly heavy by New England standards," weather.com said, but poor visibility and bitterly cold air presented real dangers.

    More from Weather.com

    No widespread flight cancellations were reported by 6 a.m. ET Monday, according to FlightAware.com. However, the weather system on Sunday contributed to more than 200 U.S. and Canadian flight cancellations. Particularly hard hit was Charlotte-Douglas International Airport in North Carolina, where 84 flights were canceled. The storm dropped flurries as far south as Charleston, N.C.

    Elsewhere, the Northern Plains was experiencing the nation's harshest winter weather.

    The weather service issued blizzard warnings for parts of North Dakota and Minnesota, with wind gusts up to 45 mph and snowfall of up to 10 inches expected through Monday evening. The nearly 3 million inhabitants of Minneapolis-St. Paul were forecast to just miss the worst of the weather. 

    Related:

    High winds, snow hit New England

    Clobbered Northeast begins to dig out

     


    141 comments

    We must ban snow, especially snow on interstate highways. It causes too many injuries....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, connecticut, snow, minnesota, maine, new-hampshire, vermont, north-dakota, winds, northeast, featured, blizzard
  • 9
    Feb
    2013
    6:25am, EST

    Clobbered by record-setting blizzard, Northeast begins to dig out

    NBC's Ron Mott reports that cleanup is slowly underway from the Blizzard of 2013 is underway in the Northeast.

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

     Updated at 4:30 p.m. ET: A gusting winter storm buried parts of the Northeast under 3 feet of snow and left millions of people with little to do Sunday but wait — for lights to come on, flights to resume and packed-in cars to be freed.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Transportation systems slowly flickered back. New York airports reopened on limited schedules, and around 11 p.m. Saturday night Boston’s Logan International Airport welcomed in its first flight since the storm hit. All major airports are operational again, but many in the affected area are still experiencing delays and cancellations.

    Still, for the most part, the country’s most populous region came to a standstill for a day. Elected officials pleaded with people to stay inside, even after the snow stopped, to let emergency crews and snowplows do their work.

    Full coverage from The Weather Channel

    “This is going to go on for a number of days,” Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy said. “This will not all be done today.”


    Gov. Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island warned that while it was no longer snowing, the danger hadn't ended.

    "People need to take this storm seriously, even after it's over. If you have any kind of heart condition, be careful with the shoveling," The Associated Press quoted him as saying.

    The storm was blamed for at least 10 deaths, including a child poisoned by carbon monoxide and an 81-year-old Connecticut woman who was clearing snow with a blower who was struck and killed by a hit-and-run driver.

    At 4:00 p.m. ET Sunday, 290,726 homes and businesses were without power in New York, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut, down from a total of about 650,000. Some schools in the region said that they would be closed on Monday, according to the AP.

    NBC's Ron Allen joins Lester Holt with the latest from Connecticut, a state that had some of the highest snow totals.

    And along the coast, including among people battered by Superstorm Sandy less than four months ago, flooding was a concern. The snowstorm announced itself with hurricane-force winds and churned up offshore waters.

    When the snow finally stopped Saturday afternoon, cities and towns reported eye-popping snow totals — 40 inches in Hampden, Conn., 38 inches in Milford, Conn., and 34 inches in New Haven. Portland, Maine, got almost 32 inches, breaking its record.

    Boston reported a hair under 25 inches, placing the storm in that city’s five-worst on record. Concord, N.H., reported 2 feet. Central Park in New York — by afternoon a sledder’s paradise — reported 11.4 inches.

    The National Weather Service recorded peak wind gusts of 83 mph in Cuttyhunk, Mass., the strength of a Category 1 hurricane. There were gusts of 72 mph in Westport, Conn., and 76 mph in East Boston.

    On the Long Island Expressway, which looked more like a moonscape than a busy thoroughfare, 60 to 100 cars were stuck in the snow, and police officers worked through the night to free people from cars and get them to safety.

    Richard Ebbrecht, a chiropractor, told the AP that he left his office in Brooklyn at 3 p.m. Friday and got stuck six or seven times on the expressway and other roads.

     “We were all helping each other, shoveling, pushing,” he said.

    He gave up and settled in for the night just two miles from home. At 8 a.m., he walked the rest of the way.

     “I could run my car and keep the heat on and listen to the radio a little bit,” he told the AP. “It was very icy under my car. That’s why my car is still there.”

    Among the 10 deaths blamed on the storm was an 11-year-old boy in Boston who was overcome by carbon monoxide while keeping warm in the car.

    NBC's Ron Mott joins Lester Holt with an updates on the blizzard's aftermath in Rhode Island.

    The boy had been helping his father shovel out the car and got cold. The father started the engine, and the boy got inside, a Boston fire spokesman told the AP. But the car’s exhaust pipe was covered by a snowbank.

    In a separate incident, also in Boston, a 20-year-old man was found dead in his car. He was also overcome by carbon monoxide fumes.

    In Auburn, N.H., a man was killed after losing control of his car and hitting a tree. He was found dead in his car by local authorities.

    In Prospect, Conn., an 81-year-old woman was using a snowblower when a driver struck and killed her and fled the scene, Malloy said. In Danbury, a man slipped on a porch and was found dead Saturday morning, the mayor told NBC Connecticut.

    A 53-year-old man in Bridgeport, Conn., was found dead under snow at his house, possibly from hypothermia or a cardiac arrest, authorities said. A 55-year-old New Milford man died after he suffered a heart attack while plowing. A Shelton man, 49, died while digging out his truck. 

    A man in Livingston County, N.Y., was plowing his driveway with a tractor Friday night when the tractor went off the edge of the road and fell on top of him.

    And in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., an 18-year-old woman lost control of her car in the snow and struck Muril M. Hancock, 74, who was walking near the shoulder, police said Friday. Hancock died at the hospital.

    On the Long Island Expressway, dozens of cars were stuck in the snow, and police officers worked through the night to free people from cars and get them to safety. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

    In New York, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Saturday morning that 2,200 pieces of equipment were on the streets, salting and plowing. He said that all the primary streets in the city had been plowed.

     “I think it’s fair to say that we were very lucky,” he said. “Looks like we dodged a bullet.”

    He said the city had offered help to other places hit harder by the storm.

    In Massachusetts, Gov. Deval Patrick had ordered all cars off the roads but announced Saturday afternoon that he was lifting the ban for Interstate 91 and the slice of the state to the west.

    Connecticut had a similar ban in place, but Malloy could not say when it might be lifted. He said Saturday afternoon that he expected it to remain in place at least for the rest of the day.

    Transportation systems slowly flickered back to life Saturday, but for the most part, the country's most populous region came to a standstill for a day. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports.

    The winter storm was fueled by two weather systems — a so-called clipper pattern that swept across the Midwest and a band of rain that churned up from the South. They clashed explosively over the Northeast on Friday.

    The storm arrived in earnest Friday night. The governors of New York, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island all declared states of emergency.

    More than 800 National Guard soldiers and airmen were activated in Connecticut, Massachusetts and New York to provide roadway support, emergency transportation and back-up for first responders, the Department of Defense said.

    Related:

    'Absolutely beautiful' scene in Conn. town hit by most snow

    Sandy survivors: It's like a repeat 'nightmare'  

    The Weather Channel live blog

    State-by-state impact of the storm

    Current conditions

    773 comments

    I find it interesting that most of these people are so concerned with their own well being. However, we in the South, deal with these tribulations all the time. Suddenly, they get hit with a storm, then a snowstorm, and they think they're so in trouble! Really? Poeple, buck up! Deal with it! That's  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: hurricane, weather, new-york, storm, snow, boston, winds, northeast, featured
  • 26
    Oct
    2012
    11:31am, EDT

    Santa Ana winds expected to blow into San Diego; fire danger high

    By Monica Garske, Tony Shin and Steven Luke , NBCSanDiego.com

    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    With hot, dry, Santa Ana winds expected to blow into San Diego through Saturday, fire officials are warning locals to be on high alert for the next few days.

    A high-wind warning was to take effect Thursday night, followed by a red flag warning, which means fire danger is high. As a result of the dangerous weather conditions, more local firefighters will be on duty through Saturday.

    “We’re getting our first traditional offshore Santa Ana wind event,” California Fire Capt. Mike Mohler said. “(That means) humidity in the single digits, a temperature increase and then an offshore flow.


    "The warm temperatures, low humidity and strong winds are an East County formula for disaster. One only needs to look at the calendar to know we’re in the heart of fire season."

    View complete coverage from NBCSanDiego.com

    Thursday marks the nine-year anniversary of the destructive 2003 Cedar Fire, which ripped through neighborhoods from Scripps Ranch to Harbison Canyon.

    Officials say some of the strongest winds are expected along Interstate 8 and will peak Saturday morning, causing potential problems.

    Experienced local residents are not taking the red flag fire warning lightly.

    “We’ve just come from Palm Desert and the wind is really blowing there and it’s hot. It’s coming,” Alpine resident Charles Caldwell told NBC 7.

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com 

    At sunset Thursday, the wind could be heard rustling through the trees in Santa Ysabel. That gusting wind is supposed to grow stronger and stronger throughout the night.

    “We know all about the danger,” said Dean Thornbury, a Ramona resident.

    Thornbury has lived in the Ramona area for 30 years and said he doesn’t like the winds associated with San Diego fire season.

    Back in 2007, Santa Ana winds fanned the flames that leveled his ranch home. He watched it burn to the ground, as he fought to rescue his horses.

    “Some of them had their eyelids burned off. The trailer door knocked me down. The winds were like 90 miles per hour,” Thornbury recalled.

    The fear of a wind-fueled fire happening again has Cal Fire officials ready to react fast.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    Officials said an additional air tanker, flown in from Northern California, is now waiting in the wings with two others at Ramona Airport, also ready to spring into use at the first sign of smoke.

    Officials have also increased staffing levels around the county to accommodate more fire engines and ground crews -- just in case.

    In addition, some residents in fire danger zones are getting an emergency voice message from San Diego Gas & Electric alerting locals to be ready for the worst.

    The message warns, in part: “This is SDG&E with an important message. High wind associated with red flag warnings could cause outages or require SDG&E to turn off power for public safety.”

    Officials said safety should always be the first priority and that means having plenty of defensible space around your home.

    “There are a lot of people that don’t pay attention to that and they ought to because it’s amazing to everything burnt to the ground,” Thornbury said.

    Officials also said residents should not barbecue through Saturday, just in case, and be extremely careful with cigarette butts.

     

    5 comments

    During the 2007 fire, the air tankers based in the Ramona airport were grounded at a critical early time because of the smoke and the high winds. Meanwhile, planes were able to operate reasonably well at Lindbergh Field and MCAS Miramar, just a few miles to the West.

    Show more
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  • 19
    Jan
    2012
    7:16pm, EST

    Man admits dumping fireplace ash sparking Reno-area blaze

    More than two dozen homes burned in the blaze before firefighters brought it under control. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

     

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 8:45 p.m. ET:

     RENO, Nev. -- Reno authorities say an elderly man has admitted to improperly disposing fireplace ashes, a potential cause of the Washoe Drive Fire that was 65 percent contained at 5 p.m. local time.

    Fire Chief Michael Hernandez said the man is extremely remorseful and is cooperating with investigators.

    A woman suffocated from the fire and an investigation into the blaze is now a criminal probe, officials said.


    The definitive cause of the 3,200-acre blaze that destroyed 29 homes was still under investigation, officials said. The figures are a change from earlier damage tolls given by authorities.

    Updated at 1:45 p.m. ET:

    Firefighters worked Friday to hold the line on a fast-moving brush fire near Reno that forced more than 10,000 people to flee and destroyed more than 26 homes. Fire officials said one person was dead.

    The blaze started shortly after noon Thursday, and about 2,000 people remained under evacuation orders late Thursday, Reno Fire Chief Michael Hernandez said.

    More than 700 people were expected to fight the fire Friday. Spokesman Mark Regan of the Sierra Fire Protection District said the blaze, which burned 3,700 acres, was 50 percent contained.

    The cause of the blaze was not determined.

    Hernandez said that 20 homes were destroyed, but a full assessment might reveal even more damage. There was one death in the fire area, Hernandez said, but he declined to provide more details, saying an autopsy would be needed to determine the cause.

    The blaze was "almost a carbon copy" of a huge wild fire that destroyed 30 homes in southwest Reno in November, the fire chief said. It also forced the evacuation of 10,000 people.

    "It's inconceivable that this community has been struck by tragedy again," said Gov. Brian Sandoval, who declared a state of emergency Thursday.

    It was not yet known what caused the fire.

    Wet weather was forecast Friday, and snow was forecast Friday night. But high winds were expected to continue.

    The Reno area had gone a winter-record 56 days without any precipitation until light snow fell earlier this week. 

    Updated at 5:12 a.m. ET: Firefighters worked early Friday to hold the line on a fast-moving brush fire that tore through the Reno area, destroying more than 20 homes and forcing thousands of residents to flee.

    The blaze started shortly after noon Thursday and, fueled by wind gusts reaching 82 mph, mushroomed to more than 6 square miles in size before firefighters stopped its surge toward Reno.

    About 2,000 people remained under evacuation orders late Thursday, Reno Fire Chief Michael Hernandez said. About 250 firefighters were battling the blaze.

    Wet weather was forecast Friday, and snow was forecast Friday night. But high winds were expected to continue, with gusts up to 40 mph.

    About 2,300 homes in the area were without power Thursday night.

    Updated 1:10 a.m. ET: More than 10,000 people have been evacuated as a wind-driven wildfire burns out of control near Reno, The Associated Press reports. Reno Fire Chief Michael Hernandez said hundreds of firefighters were "in the thick of battle" against a blaze that has burned across thousands of acres.

    "The news is not good," Hernandez said. Wind gusts of up to 82 mph were reported and a five-mile stretch of U.S. Highway 395 was closed.

    Hernandez confirmed one death, but would not say it was caused by the fire until an autopsy is performed, KRNV.com reported.

    Gov. Brian Sandoval has declared a state of emergency.

    See more coverage at NBC station KRNV

    At a press conference Thursday afternoon, fire officials said that the brush fire began around noon just north of Washoe Lake and that the cause was under investigation.

    Original post: RENO, Nev. -- Fierce winds fueled a fast-moving brush fire through a valley south of Reno on Thursday, destroying at least 10 homes and threatening many more along a stretch of U.S. 395. 

    At least 10 homes burned in the Washoe Area Estates neighborhood, NBC station KRNV of Reno reported. Washoe County declared a state of emergency.

    Heavy smoke forced authorities to shutdown a five-mile stretch of the highway north of Washoe Lake in Pleasant Valley, about 10 miles from Reno, the Reno Gazette-Journal reported.

    James Glover Ii / Reuters

    A crew member from the Nevada Department of Forestry works to control the Washoe Drive fire near a home off Highway 395 in Washoe City, Nev., on Thursday.

    Authorities evacuated hundreds of children from Pleasant Valley Elementary School and residents of neighboring Washoe City.

    Sheriff's deputies told the Reno newspaper winds were pushing flames closer to Reno, where voluntary evacuations were issued in several neighborhoods.

    Vice President Joe Biden's visit to Reno -- already delayed because of bad weather -- was cut short because of the fire. Biden was two hours late to give a speech to students at Galena High School. The vice president was forced to end his speech after 25 minutes because officials needed the high school gym as a command center for firefighters.

    Winds in the area were gusting over 50 mph, The Weather Channel reported, but were expected to moderate on Friday to about 20 mph, with gusts to about 30 mph.

    Winds gusts up to 82 mph were reported within a few miles of the fire, and a gust of 122 mph was recorded atop Slide Mountain, which is between the fire and Reno at the Mount Rose ski resort.

    Rounding up horses
    Flames up to 40 feet high raced through sagebrush, grass and pines in an area where small neighborhoods are dispersed in a rural landscape. Washoe County animal services officials were helping round up horses and other livestock for evacuation.

    NBC News

    A large home is destroyed by flames near Reno on Thursday.

    About six flights were diverted, delayed or canceled at the Reno-Tahoe International Airport as a reult of heavy black smokein Washoe Valley, said spokesman Brian Kulpin.

    The conditions were similar to those Nov. 18, when a wind-driven fire destroyed 30 homes in southwest Reno.

    This post includes reporting from NBC station KRNV of Reno, msnbc.com staff and The Associated Press. 

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    62 comments

    I'm here in Carson City, Nv. and i tow for the Highway Patrol and Sheriff's dept. What the news is not telling you is that the fire started around 1p.m. by a lightning strike. This was further fuled by 60+ mph winds. I was in Washoe Valley flipping over a trailer with a boat at the time the fire sta …

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    Explore related topics: fire, winds, valley, reno, tahoe, brushfire, washoe
  • 28
    Dec
    2011
    6:00am, EST

    Strong winds divert flights, spark NYC airport delays

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    NEW YORK -- The skies above New York City were clogged with planes waiting to land in winds gusting up to 50 mph Tuesday night, forcing long delays at two of the three major metropolitan airports and causing some flights to be diverted to other cities.

    National Weather Service meteorologist Adrienne Leptich said the delays occurred because the number of planes that can land each hour must be decreased in high winds, forcing some planes to circle the region or be diverted to other airports if fuel runs low.


    "The winds were a little bit stronger than we anticipated," she said. "We're getting into the season now where we have stronger storms. It's not completely out of the ordinary that this would happen."

    • Blame Arctic fridge for mild winter so far

    The Federal Aviation Administration reported at 10 p.m. ET that some arriving flights at Newark International Airport were delayed an average of 2 hours and 8 minutes while flights into LaGuardia Airport were delayed an average 1 hour and 34 minutes. Kennedy International Airport reported minor delays.

    By early Wednesday, all three airports were reporting average delays for arrivals and departures of less than 15 minutes.

    Daniel Kennedy said his 4:48 p.m. Delta flight operated by Shuttle America left Madison, Wis., bound for New York's LaGuardia Airport, only to be diverted to Albany, where passengers were kept on board while the plane was refueled. It did not land in New York until shortly before midnight.

    "Our gate is occupied by another aircraft diverted from LaGuardia as well," one of the plane's pilots could be heard telling passengers as Kennedy spoke to The Associated Press while the plane was on the ground in Albany.

    "They tell us we can't get up because we're sitting on an active taxiway," Kennedy said. Shortly afterward, a flight attendant announced that they could get up one at a time to use a restroom.

    'People are behaving'
    After landing in New York, Kennedy said the flight attendants had been helpful, passing out bottled water at one point to passengers who remained in good spirits. He said he wished there had been more communication from the pilots.

    "I'm impressed by how well people are behaving," he said.

    • Riders stuck on snow-trapped train sue

    Chris Kelly Singley, a Delta spokeswoman based in Atlanta, said two LaGuardia-bound Delta aircraft were diverted to Boston Tuesday night "as a direct result of the winds we were seeing in the three New York airports."

    She said the diversions are necessary when fuel starts to get low as planes circle while waiting for their turn to land.

    A message left Tuesday with Shuttle America's parent company, Republic Airways, was not immediately returned.

    Leptich said the space between planes must be increased in bad weather conditions. She had good news for those traveling in or out of New York City through New Year's, saying the next possibility of any kind of significant storm appeared to be at least eight days away.

    Meanwhile, NBC New York reported that strong winds ripped off the roof and blew out the windows of a hangar at MacArthur Airport in Ronkonkoma. However, no injuries were reported.

    The Associated Press, msnbc.com staff and NBC New York contributed to this report.

    3 comments

    flying sucks! TSA, baggage fees, smaller seats, delays, need i name more? ok i will. TSA. there.

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  • 5
    Dec
    2011
    6:39am, EST

    Southern California braces for 70 mph winds

    A new round of high-wind warnings have been issued for some areas of California, but the winds won't be as strong as last week. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By msnbc.com staff and NBC News

    Updated at 7 p.m. ET

    High winds returned to parts of Southern California on Monday, and even stronger gusts were possible overnight.

    Malibu saw 62 mph gusts around midday, while nearby areas reported winds above 40 mph.

    Winds reaching up to 70 mph are possible overnight, NBCLosAngeles.com reported.

    Nearly 34,000 Southern California Edison customers remained without power Monday as a result of last week's wind storms. A second round is certain to impede cleanup and repair efforts.


    Tens of thousands of homes and businesses remained without power for a second day on Friday after powerful winds toppled trees and power lines and left debris across a wide swath of Southern California.

    High wind warnings will be in effect through Tuesday afternoon in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties.

    The wind will increase the risk of wildfires and make driving difficult and hazardous, the National Weather Service said.

    "Northeast winds are expected to increase sharply late tonight across the mountains and valleys of Los Angeles and Ventura counties," the weather service said on its website Sunday. The strongest winds there are expected to hit on Monday, gusting to 70 pmh offshore and 60 mph in coastal and valley areas.

    • Read more news on NBC LA

    Inland winds will also blow up to 60 mph in San Bernardino and Riverside Counties, the weather service said. The gusts will make driving risky for tall vehicles and could blow over trees.

    NBC News and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

    6 comments

    What's causing the high winds ? High winds are not that uncommon in California, are they ? I've checked other sources. Remember the 5 W's when writing a news article ! Otherwise, it makes you look like someone who got taught under the No Child Left Behind debacle.

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  • 3
    Dec
    2011
    11:40am, EST

    More than 100,000 homes still in the dark in Southern California

    By NBC Los Angeles and msnbc.com staff

    More than 100,000 homes remained in the dark Saturday after this week's powerful windstorms raked Southern California, utility official says.

    In Los Angeles, about 24,00 residents were without power, while in the San Gabriel Valley, about 96,000 customers were affected, utility officials say. 

    A small army of 100 workers planned to work around the clock this weekend to restore power, Maychelle Yee, a spokeswoman for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power told City News Service.

    "At this time, the current estimated duration of power outages is 24 to 48 hours from the start of an outage," Yee said. "However, a very small percentage of our customers may experience outages lasting more than 48 hours. For these customers, we ask for your patience as crews continue to work to restore your power."

    Also, many parks and buildings remain closed amid concerns of what the red flag warning would bring. A red flag warning for much of the area will take effect at 6 a.m. and last until 2 p.m. Sunday.

    Gene Blevins / Reuters

    A man looks at uprooted trees which have fallen on cars after a heavy wind storm in the morning at Highland Park in Los Angeles on Thursday.

    "The potential exists for another round of gusty northeast winds this afternoon into Sunday over Los Angeles and Ventura counties, with very low humidities,'' according to a National Weather Service advisory.

    Los Angeles County Fire Chief Daryl L. Osby ordered 290 additional personnel and other resources pre-deployed in preparation for Saturday's predicted high winds and increased fire danger.

    The National Weather Service forecast Santa Ana winds blowing through Sunday afternoon and increasing the fire risks for L.A. County.

    Thursday's winds -- the worst seen in the region in decades -- uprooted trees, sheared off thousands of tree limbs and caused high-power lines to topple, wreaking havoc with power supplies throughout the area.

    Red Cross and shelters
    The South Pasadena Senior Center at 1102 Oxley St. was turned into a shelter by the city Friday to help residents without power, according to South Pasadena police.

    "The shelter will remain open for residents without power or heat and no other options for off-site shelter for the duration of the outage,'' according to the police.

    Red Cross resources were also being brought in to help make those seeking shelter as comfortable as possible, police said, adding that animals could be boarded through the Pasadena Humane Society. No animals were permitted in the shelter, police said.

    Pasadena, one of several cities to declare a local emergency Thursday, reported that all its major streets had reopened, as were most of its secondary streets. About 99 percent of Pasadena Water and Power customers had service restored Friday, City Manager Michael Beck said.

    Four people were injured in the storm, and 37 people were taken to a temporary shelter at the Robinson Park Recreation Center. All but one was relocated late Friday.

    "Despite some continued challenges, Pasadena is returning to normal,'' Beck said, adding that cleanup in the hard-hit city could take several weeks. "City resources will remain devoted to restoring services, parks and parkways to the high standards our community expects and deserves."

    More than 600 trees fell, and the number of damaged street trees was unknown. There were 67 trees that fell at Brookside Golf Course and 120 more were severely damaged. The number of trees that fell or were severely damaged in city parks is unknown.

    More news and feature stories from msnbc.com:

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    59 comments

    Of course there are 100,000 homes in the dark in the LA area. Liberals/progressives live their lives in the dark. Had nothing to do with wind.

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  • 2
    Dec
    2011
    11:35am, EST

    Many still powerless after LA-area wind storm

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news service reports

    More than 200,000 homes and businesses remained without power for a second day on Friday after powerful winds toppled trees and power lines and left debris across a wide swath of Southern California.

    The fierce gusts that tore across Western states Thursday created a path of destruction that closed schools and prompted some communities to declare emergencies.

    The storms, described as a once-in-a-decade event, were the result of a dramatic difference in pressure between a strong, high-pressure system and a cold, low-pressure system, meteorologists said. This funnels strong winds down mountain canyons and slopes.

    The system brought high wind warnings and advisories for California, Utah, Nevada, Wyoming, Arizona and New Mexico. The blustery weather was expected to next hit Oklahoma, Missouri and Indiana.

    'Off and on'
    The violent winds eased but strong gusts still blew through the region Thursday night, at times reaching 60 mph in some California mountains.

    Powerful winds are hammering the West once again, with California bearing the brunt of the damage. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    Forecasters said the winds would continue Friday, but diminish as the day wore on.

    "It looks like we're going to have winds, off and on, through the weekend," said NBC4 forecaster Byron Miranda from Los Angeles.

    Read complete coverage from NBC Los Angeles

    The winds were also fanning fires in northern California.

    The Sacramento Bee reported that more than a dozen fires burned more than 130 acres in El Dorado County. Five fires had also destroyed more than 250 acres in Tuolumne and Calaveras counties.

    In Southern California, the storm knocked out electricity to more than 350,000 utility customers. By early Friday, 240,000 of them were still without power.

    Gusts, which reached 80 mph, were blamed for toppling semitrailers and causing trees to fall on homes, apartment complexes and cars.

    Gene Blevins / Reuters

    Local residents look at eucalyptus trees which fell on cars and blocked the street on Avenue 57 after a heavy wind storm in Los Angeles.

    A state of emergency was declared in Los Angeles County, where schools in a dozen communities were closed.

    In some neighborhoods, concrete light poles cracked in half. Darkened traffic signals and fallen palm tree fronds and branches snarled traffic. At a Shell station, the roof collapsed into a heap of twisted metal.

    Heaviest hit area
    In heavily damaged Pasadena, schools and libraries closed and a local emergency, the first since 2004, was declared. Officials said 40 people were evacuated from an apartment building after a tree smashed part of the roof.

    Pasadena is known for its historic homes and wide oak-lined streets that are frequently depicted in films.

    "We still have large trees blocking streets and getting them removed is a priority today," said Lisa Derderian, emergency management coordinator for Pasadena.

    About 200 buildings were damaged there. More than 40 buildings were red tagged, meaning they are not inhabitable.

    "It will take weeks to get this stuff clear," contractor Tony Martinez told NBC Los Angeles. "We've got some crews, the city has some crews, so if we keep this up we're talking about a month or so."

    Many residents Thursday blamed the city for protecting its old trees from over-trimming to such an extent that they have now become a public safety hazard.

    Vince Mehrabian, the general manager at A&B Motor Cars, estimated eight Lexus, Cadillac and other luxury cars had been destroyed by fallen limbs. He said he'd been asking the city for four years to trim the trees more.

    On a street around the corner, almost every tree was either cracked in half or missing limbs.

    Elsewhere, San Diego’s Anna Cearley posted on her Twitter feed how she was kept awake by the wind.

    “Thought we were done with #winds in #SanJose but tonight is worse yet. Whistling so loud, can't sleep,” she said on Friday.

    Similar stories of downed trees and power lines echoed across the West. Areas hit hard:

    Utah
    On Interstate 15, strong gusts blew more than 10 semi-trucks onto their sides, prompting authorities to temporarily close the highway to trucks. Commuter train travel was also interrupted after debris covered the tracks.

    Schools closed in Centerville, where a 102-mph gust was reported. Mail delivery and trash pickup were canceled.

    Davis County issued a disaster declaration to request state assistance, citing more than $3.5 million in estimated damage to infrastructure.

    The Red Cross opened three centers to provide food and aid to people affected by the storm, and opened one overnight shelter in Ogden.

    Nevada
    Weather officials warned that blowing dust was creating visibility problems on a highway between Reno and Las Vegas.

    Colorado
    In Steamboat Springs, the roof of a four-story condominium complex was blown off and about 100 trees were knocked over, some landing on homes. A ski area shut down its lifts after a gust of 123 mph.

    Even some weather experts were surprised by the wind's force.

    Jonathan Lloyd from NBC News Los Angeles, msnbc.com's Sevil Omer and The Associated Press contributed to this report.  

    More news and feature stories from msnbc.com:

    • Focus groups reveal why they don't like Romney 
    • From housewife to managing $822 billion for USAF
    • Treking 180 feet underground into a primitive gold mine

    30 comments

    EMERGENCY!! EMERGENCY!! my patio umbrella fell over.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: california, power-outage, los-angeles, santa-ana, winds, gusts
  • 1
    Dec
    2011
    7:58pm, EST

    More than 100,000 still without power after winds lash California

    Powerful winds are hammering the West once again, with California bearing the brunt of the damage. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

     

    Updated 6 a.m. ET: Ferocious winds that have brought down trees and power lines across California and western states are forecast to move east and hit Oklahoma, Missouri and Indiana on Friday, The Associated Press reported.

    The violent winds eased during Thursday but strong gusts still blew through the region, at times reaching 60 mph in some California mountains that had seen gusts of up to 150mph late on Wednesday.

    The windy weather is expected to eventually diminish, forecasters say.


    In Steamboat Springs, Colo., the roof of a four-story condominium complex was blown off and about 100 trees were knocked over, some landing on homes. A ski area shut down its lifts after a gust of 123 mph.

    In Nevada, weather officials warned that blowing dust was creating visibility problems on a highway between Reno and Las Vegas.

    The winds were fanning fires in northern California. The Sacramento Bee reported that as of Thursday evening, seven fires had burned more than 130 acres in El Dorado County. Five fires had also burned more than 250 acres in Tuolumne and Calaveras counties.

    Even some weather experts were surprised by the wind's force. "It's one of the strongest events that I can remember," said Brian Edwards, a meteorologist with Accuweather. "It's rather rare."

    Updated 5:30 a.m. ET: Approximately 102,000 of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP)'s 1.4 million electric customers are without power as high winds continue to cause outages in several neighborhoods, NBC Los Angeles reported. 

    These customers are almost exlusively located in the Los Angeles Metro Area with a few customers remaining in the San Fernando Valley. Power has already been restored to more than 114,000 customers since the wind storm began on Wednesday night.

     

    By msnbc.com staff and news service reports

    The National Weather Service called California's winds a once-in-a-decade event — and it's not over.

    Winds were expected to pick up again Thursday night and race through the mountains, where gusts of 65 mph were expected through Friday evening and 50 mph was forecast for the valleys. 

    The last time that Southern California was battered by such intense winds was in January 2007 when similarly high gusts toppled trees and made a mess. 

    High wind warnings and advisories were also issued for Utah, Nevada, Wyoming, Arizona and New Mexico. The blustery weather is also expected to slam Oklahoma, Missouri and Indiana.

    Here are the strongest gusts recorded, according to Greg Forbes, a severe weather expert for The Weather Channel:

    • In California, 150 mph winds at Mammoth Mountain
    • In Colorado, 123 mph winds at Steamboat Springs Ski Resort
    • In Utah, 102 mph at Centerville
    • In Nevada, 94 mph southeast of Pahrump in Nye County
    • In New Mexico, 88 mph at Sandia Park in Bernalillo County

    The Associated Press contribued to this report.

    Earlier: Winds cause 'extensive damage' in California

     

     More news and feature stories from msnbc.com:

    • Nation's food banks taxed by lingering joblessness
    • From housewife to managing $822 billion for USAF
    • How to spot fake online product reviews

    1 comment

    So, what caused the high winds ? Remember the 5 W's when writing an article.

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  • 1
    Dec
    2011
    3:23pm, EST

    Winds cause 'extensive damage' in California

    Strong gusts caused a blackout at LAX on Tuesday evening and meteorologists say the wind could become stronger on Wednesday. The Weather Channel's Jim Cantore reports.

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news service reports

    Some of the fiercest winds in years blasted the West overnight and Thursday, knocking down trees and power lines in California and forcing some schools to close as gusts reached 102 mph in Utah.

    The winds left hundreds of thousands of people without power, mainly in California, darkening streets and traffic lights as commuters made their way into work. Pictures of damage -- from uprooted trees blocking streets to toppling houses and buildings -- were shared over and over on social network sites on Wednesday.

    Mayor Michael D. Antonovich declared a state of emergency in Los Angeles County.


    "Did anybody else in LA's block look like Armageddon this morning!?” Regina King posted to her Twitter feed Thursday.

    “Here's how bad it is in our neighborhood: the hardware store is sold out of chainsaws,” Alex Jablonski said in his Twitter post.

    The National Weather Service issued high wind warnings and advisories for parts of California, Utah, Nevada, Wyoming, Arizona and New Mexico.

    Read an earlier story on worst Santa Ana winds in years

    "What the weather experts are telling us are that these probably are the worst windstorms to hit (the area) in more than a decade," Bob Spencer, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County Department of Public Works said, adding that preliminary reports suggest "extensive damage."

    Areas hard hit:

    Southern California
    High winds blew over at least six tractor-trailers before dawn on highways below the Cajon Pass in San Bernardino County, said California Highway Patrol Officer Mario Lopez.

    Pasadena closed schools and libraries and declared a local emergency, the first since 2004. Fire officials said 40 people were evacuated from an apartment building after a tree collapsed, smashing part of the roof.

    "We've had several fires, trees into structures, limbs down," Lisa Derderian, Pasandena’s emergency management coordinator told NBC Los Angeles.

    Overnight, a tree collapsed the canopy of a gas station, but an employee shut off the pumps and no fuel spilled. Another tree toppled onto a car, trapping the driver, who was taken to a hospital.

    The San Gabriel Mission also sustained damage when a 70-foot high eucalyptus tree snapped in the mission's cemetery, the Pasadena Star-News reported.

    An estimated 300,000 customers in Southern California were without electricity Thursday. About 26,000 customers were without power in the Santa Cruz Mountains of Northern California.

    In northwestern Los Angeles County, sheriff's deputies rescued two men whose boat capsized in 5-foot swells and gusting winds. They clung to the boat as high winds pushed them to a dam with a 200-foot drop.

    They were treated for mild hypothermia, and one man, a former opera singer, was so appreciative that he serenaded the rescuers with "God Bless America."

    Utah
    High winds ripped through Utah, overturning several tractor-trailers on or near Interstate 15, and 54,000 customers were without power along the state's 120-mile Wasatch Front as high winds took down power lines.

    Police asked schools to close in Centerville, where the weather service reported a 102 mph gust. Mail delivery and trash pickup were canceled.

    Nevada
    The winds had died down by Thursday but some delays were reported at Las Vegas McCarran International Airport because of bad weather there.

    More news and feature stories from msnbc.com:

    • Nation's food banks taxed by lingering joblessness
    • From housewife to managing $822 billion for USAF
    • How to spot fake online product reviews

    NBC News Los Angeles, msnbc.com's Sevil Omer contributed to this report, as did The Associated Press.

    34 comments

    We get these Santa Ana winds every year. This year may be a little worse than most years, but its not unusual or unheard of. So the people commenting on California getting hit with actual weather, again, the winds come every year.

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  • 1
    Dec
    2011
    12:02pm, EST

    Worst Santa Ana winds in years to move cross-country

    Strong gusts caused a blackout at LAX on Tuesday evening and meteorologists say the wind could become stronger on Wednesday. The Weather Channel's Jim Cantore reports.

    By The Associated Press and NBC News

    LOS ANGELES - High winds flipped over trees and trucks and knocked out power to more than 300,000 California customers before moving inland early Thursday, where schools in a Utah town closed because of 100 mph wind gusts.

    Some of the worst Santa Ana winds in years blasted through California Wednesday and Thursday, sweeping down through canyons and creating gusts of up to 80 mph through the night, with a 97-mph gust recorded Wednesday night at Whitaker Peak in Los Angeles County. High gusts Thursday morning topped 60 mph.

    The National Weather Service issued high wind warnings and wind advisories for parts of California, Utah, Nevada, and Arizona, New Mexico and Wyoming.

    "What's driving this is a large, cold low-pressure system that's currently centered over Needles, Calif. The strong winds are wrapping around it," weather service forecaster Andrew Rorke said.

    The system will sit and spin counter-clockwise over the area for the next day, although "it won't be quite as hellacious" as on Wednesday night, Rorke said.

    The pressure front will then begin moving cross-country, eventually bringing blustery weather to Oklahoma, Missouri and Indiana, he said.

    An estimated 300,000 customers in Southern California were without electricity Thursday morning and about 26,000 more in the Santa Cruz Mountains of Northern California. San Francisco was spared any blackouts but thousands elsewhere in the Bay area were in the dark.

    "We're making a dent in repairs, but we don't know what the winds will bring later this afternoon," Mark Hanson of SoCal Edison said, reported NBCLosAngeles.com.

    In Southern California, high winds blew over at least six semitrailers before dawn on highways below the Cajon Pass in San Bernardino County, said California Highway Patrol Officer Mario Lopez. One trucker was taken to a hospital.

    Twenty-three flights were diverted and several delayed beginning Wednesday at Los Angeles International airport because of severe crosswinds and debris on runways, officials said. An hour-long power outage Wednesday evening affected all passenger terminals. The winds had died down by Thursday morning but some delays were reported in both arriving and departing flights, Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor said.

    Northeast of Los Angeles, foothill communities were hard hit as the winds swept down the San Gabriel Mountains.

    Pasadena closed schools and libraries Thursday and declared a local emergency, the first time since 2004. Fire spokeswoman Lisa Derderian said 40 people were evacuated from an apartment building Thursday morning after a tree collapsed, smashing part of the roof.

    "We've had several fires, trees into structures, limbs down," Lisa Derderian, Emergency  Management Coordinator for the city of Pasadena, told NBCLosAngeles.com. About 6,000 people lost power in Pasadena, reported NBC.

    In nearby Glendale, high winds ripped the roof off a restaurant.

    Two house fires, possibly caused by downed power lines, critically burned one person, seriously injured three others and forced seven others to flee, Derderian said. There have been hundreds of reports of wires down, she said. Trees also fell and some roads are impassable.

    Overnight, a tree collapsed the canopy of a gas station, but an employee shut off the pumps and no fuel spilled. Another tree toppled onto a car, trapping the driver, who was taken to a hospital.

    "We probably have over 100 trees that are down and arcing wires and transformers that have blown," police Lt. Jari Faulkner told the Los Angeles Times.

    Across the sprawling suburban San Gabriel Valley east of Los Angeles, hundreds of trees and power lines were down, many blocking streets.

    Along Huntington Drive, a major, six-lane thoroughfare that carries traffic into downtown Los Angeles, nearly every traffic light was dark across a distance of more than 10 miles, snarling traffic during the morning commute.

    In Arcadia, 15 miles east of Los Angeles, power was out and numerous large trees were blocking residential streets. The local school district closed all of its campuses, including the high school, three middle schools and six elementary schools.

    The winds were colder but fiercer than the Santa Ana winds that often hit California in late fall, but they carried the same ability to dry out brush and push fires into conflagrations.

    Los Angeles boosted its fire department staffing because of a red flag warning of high fire danger. Early Thursday morning, crews doused a 2-acre grass fire in a park near Occidental College. Downed power lines sparked the blaze in the midst of 80-mph wind gusts.

    The National Weather Service’s red flag warning is in effect until Friday evening, according to NBCLosAngeles.com.

    Dramatic (and operatic) rescues
    In northwestern Los Angeles County, sheriff's deputies rescued two men trapped on a dam spillway near a 200-drop. The men had gone sailing in a 10-foot boat Wednesday but gusting winds kicked up a 5-foot swell and they capsized. They clung to the boat as high winds pushed them to the dam, according to a Sheriff's Department statement.

    They were rescued and treated for mild hypothermia, and one man, a former opera singer, was so appreciative that he serenaded the rescuers with "God Bless America," according to the statement.

    High winds in Utah overturned several tractor-trailers and knocked out power to more than 30,000 customers. Police asked schools to close in Centerville, Utah, where a 100 mph gust was reported Thursday morning.

    In Wyoming, the prevailing winds usually come from the west but the storm is bringing winds from the northeast. The weather service said the shift in the winds could result in more damage than winds of the same magnitude from the normal direction. 

    • From NBCLosAngeles: Damaging winds tear through Southern Calif.
    • Also on this story: Tree crashes into actress Rebecca Gayheart's home
    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    85 comments

    What makes you think they can harness this wind, when for years they haven't been able to find a use for all the wind coming out of Washington DC?

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