Authorities ordered more than 30,000 Santa Barbara County residents and workers, and about 2,400 Ventura County residents to flee their homes Tuesday afternoon as a massive storm lumbered out of the eastern Pacific Ocean and plotted a collision course with Southern California’s fragile, fire-scarred coast.
The storm — a bloated atmospheric river of tropical moisture known as a “pineapple express” — should make landfall Tuesday night. By Friday, the system is predicted to dump 3 to 6 inches of rain along the coast and up to 10 inches in the mountains and foothills above Montecito, Carpinteria and Ojai.
“Right now … it’s taking a bull’s-eye shot at Santa Barbara County, the Thomas fire and Ventura County,” said Stuart Seto of the National Weather Service.
Of the 30,000 people ordered to flee Santa Barbara County, 21,000 are residents, according to spokeswoman Amber Anderson. The remaining 9,000 are people who work in the area during the day, she said.
Read the full story on LATimes.com.
Rain began about 2 hours ago, and here are totals since then. It's mostly light so far, but we expect the intensity to pick up this evening and overnight. You can see the recent burn areas outlined in red, which are primary areas of concern. #CAwx #SoCal #CAstorm pic.twitter.com/17ZDhFzM7W
— NWS Los Angeles (@NWSLosAngeles) March 21, 2018
People living near #ThomasFire burn areas advised to prepare for evacuations + register for #VCAlert. Visit https://t.co/7Y5goEusNH for real–time info on evacs, shelters & more. Para Información En Español haga clic aquí https://t.co/RT0a5YYO4h @Venturaoes @CountyVentura pic.twitter.com/crM3b8ctUS
— VCFD PIO (@VCFD_PIO) March 20, 2018
According to Rob Lewin, director of Santa Barbara County's Office of Emergency Management, "If you haven't evacuated, you need to. The only right thing to do is to get out of the storm's way". #805strong #SantaBarbaraCounty #Montectio #Carpinteriahttps://t.co/SWVnUMKQoQ
— Santa Barbara County (@countyofsb) March 20, 2018