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Tropical Storm Hilary: Preparation pays off for California

A rare tropical storm moved through California over the weekend, bringing record rainfall, high winds, and mudslides. Despite extreme precipitation and winds of up to 80 mph, catastrophic damage was avoided – in part due to successful preparation efforts honed from years of extreme weather events in the state. 

More than half of California’s population was affected by Tropical Storm Hilary, which dropped a year’s worth of rainfall in one day, and in some areas two years’ worth. Hilary made landfall in Mexico on Aug. 20, swept north through Southern California, and then dissipated in southern Nevada. No deaths have been reported in the United States; one person died in Mexico. 

Why We Wrote This

California’s familiarity with disaster preparation, born of many experiences with storms, wildfires, and earthquakes, helped ease the impact of rare Tropical Storm Hilary.

Officials in California quickly mobilized residents and resources, issuing evacuation orders, detailing safety reminders, and providing sandbags ahead of the storm. Efforts were guided by high-tech and highly accurate meteorological predictions, and aided by the storm’s natural dissipation. 

“It is a good outcome for a storm of this magnitude,” says Brian Ferguson, deputy director of crisis communications for California’s Office of Emergency Services. “We have invested a lot in technology and first responders and being on the front foot in disasters.”

A rare tropical storm moved through California over the weekend, bringing record rainfall, high winds, and mudslides. Despite extreme precipitation and winds of up to 80 mph, catastrophic damage was avoided – in part due to successful preparation efforts honed from years of extreme weather events in the state. 

At least 20 million people – more than half of California’s population – were affected by Tropical Storm Hilary, which dropped a year’s worth of rainfall in one day, and in some areas two years’ worth. Hilary made landfall in Mexico on Aug. 20, swept north through Southern California, and then dissipated in southern Nevada. No deaths were reported in the United States; one person died in Mexico. 

State, county, and local officials in California quickly mobilized residents and resources, issuing evacuation orders, detailing safety reminders, and providing sandbags ahead of the storm. Efforts were guided by high-tech and highly accurate meteorological predictions, and aided by the storm’s natural dissipation. 

Why We Wrote This

California’s familiarity with disaster preparation, born of many experiences with storms, wildfires, and earthquakes, helped ease the impact of rare Tropical Storm Hilary.

“It is a good outcome for a storm of this magnitude,” says Brian Ferguson, deputy director of crisis communications for California’s Office of Emergency Services, who suggests that California’s disaster approach could be modeled elsewhere.

“We have invested a lot in technology and first responders and being on the front foot in disasters,” says Mr. Ferguson. “And I think those are tools that we’ll take for other disasters here in the state, but could also be replicated elsewhere in the country.”

Tropical storms are rare in California. How did Hilary happen?   

Tropical Storm Hilary was born of an El Niño warming up waters in the Pacific Ocean, and a heat dome covering the Midwest. The warm water and warm, circulating air intensified the storm – which, at one point, was a Category 4 hurricane – and drew it inland from off the coast of Mexico’s Baja California Peninsula.

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