No one was home at the time. But a neighbor heard the giant tree fall. It was like a rumble. Like an earthquake rumble. You hear the rumble. Thats what i was listening to and i caught a glimpse from the window. This was moving. I thought it was coming my way. I was heading up towards the back to get out of the way. Both houses are second homes for their owners. One of the homeowners says hes still waiting for a damage estimate and is hoping to rebuild. Highway 9 is shut down this noontime still in Santa Cruz County because of a mudslide. It happened around 3 30 this morning south of highway 35. The mudslide also brought down a big tree and a power line onto the road. The highway is closed in both directions and the chp says its expected to remain shut down until 5 30 tomorrow evening while caltrans crews clean up that slide. It certainly was a downpour. Meteorologist Rosemary Orozco joins us with a look at how much rain we got in the last few days. Good afternoon. As expected, we saw q
How did you deal with the winds . Hufnler hunkered down. Yeah, we all did. Lets talk about the weather. There was some rain, Russian River and some areas where there was 4 to 8 inches. Lake county, middletown almost 8. 5. Cass za it der row, Russian River, 7. Santa cruz mountains, 7. Forestville, 5. 25. Petaluma, 3. 10. San jose 1. 67. Two reports in San Francisco. One from steve at mount davidson. The other from the did dubose triangle. The Second System responsible to the breeze to the wind is up to the pacific northwest. Still shower activity, fort bragg, willits, mendocino county, lake county north. After that, theres not a lot in napa or sonoma county. But there is a little bit. But everything is beginning to lift northward. Still a breeze but nothing compared to what we had on the weekend. Still a breezy, blustery day. Higher elevations, 35, 40. At the surface its beginning to calm down. More sun to the south. Temperatures, 60s to upper 60s and with the humidity factor very high,
The announcement Thursday concludes a year-long process to replace nearly 650 locations with names involving a racist term for Native American women, including two in the Flathead
In 1999, the Montana Legislature enacted a law, H.B. 412, requiring state agencies that own or manage public land to rename any sites or geographic locations that contain the derogatory