California Whacked by ‘Pineapple Express’ Storm

California Whacked by ‘Pineapple Express’ Storm
An SUV is crushed by a large oak tree during a storm in San Jose, Calif., on Thursday, Dec. 11, 2014. No injuries were reported. A powerful storm churned through Northern California Thursday, knocking out power to tens of thousands and delaying commuters while soaking the region with much-needed rain. (AP Photo/Bay Area News Group, Gary Reyes)
12/11/2014
Updated:
12/11/2014

SAN FRANCISCO—A powerful storm churned down the West Coast Thursday, bringing strong gales and much-needed rain and snow that caused widespread blackouts in Northern California and whiteouts in the Sierra Nevada.

The brunt of the storm hit the San Francisco Bay Area, flooding freeways, toppling trees and keeping thousands of people home from work and school.

“It’s a big storm, as we expected, and it’s headed south with very powerful winds and heavy rainfall,” said National Weather Service meteorologist Will Pi.

Strong winds felled a tree in Oregon, killing a homeless man, 40-year-old Phillip Crosby, who was sleeping on a trail. A huge gust blew down an 80-foot fir at a Santa Cruz elementary school, pinning a 6th grader by the arm for 15 minutes until chain saws cut him free.

“Unexpected, very unexpected,” said the head of Gateway Elementary, Zachary Roberts, who closed the school as the boy was treated and released from a hospital.

This “Pineapple Express” storm carried warm air and vast amounts of water in a powerful current stretching from Hawaii to the mainland and up into the mountains, where gusts up to 140 mph blew through passes, damaging homes in the Lake Tahoe area.

The current left San Francisco drenched but balmy, with 60-degree temperatures, about 5 degrees above average for this time of year.

Waves slammed onto waterfronts around the Bay area, ferries were bound to their docks, airplanes were grounded and many schools and businesses told people to stay home.

The gusts made motorists tightly grip their steering wheels on the Golden Gate Bridge, where managers created a buffer zone to prevent head-on collisions by swerving cars.

The iconic suspension bridge is engineered to swing in cross winds, so “the concern we have right now is more about vehicles,” spokeswoman Priya David Clemens said.

Pacific Gas & Electric Co. crews worked to restore power to nearly a quarter-million people. The utility’s online map showed lights out over thousands of square miles, from Humboldt near the Oregon border to Big Sur on the Central Coast.

There were multiple accidents on flooded roads, and several trees crunched cars. California’s critical north-south Interstate 5 thruway was closed by flooding in the northern town of Weed.

“A lot of people took the day off,” CalTrans spokesman Bob Haus said. “That’s a good thing.”

Disembarking from a ferry in San Francisco, Malcolm Oubre said some people were overreacting.

“I know it’s a big storm supposedly, but they’re treating it like it’s a hurricane,” he said.

Teenagers drove trucks through a flooded Safeway parking lot to make waves for kayakers in Healdsburg as grocery shoppers trudged through several feet of water to get supplies.

East Coast kids revel in snow days, but closures are rare on the West Coast, so Thursday’s cancelled classes were a novelty in San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley, Sonoma and Santa Cruz County.

Surfers welcomed big, choppy swells from the same high seas that sent towering sprays of water airborne along breakfronts in San Francisco and Monterey.

Ski resorts in the northern Sierra Nevada — where schools and roads were closed by whiteout conditions and power outages — were hoping for three feet of snow once it all settles.

Rains were expected to continue through Friday evening across much of California, and some rivers and creeks were rising fast.

Even so, California’s farmers would need more storms this size to even begin to recover from a record drought.

The storm was spreading into Southern California, areas that have suffered wildfires were preparing for mudslides.

Denise George, who sells boats in Marina Del Rey, worried mostly about the wind.

“We make sure the halyards are secure, the canvasses are fastened so nothing gets blown off or opened up, so yes we are battening down the hatches for sure.”

From The Associated Press. AP writers Kristin J. Bender and Sudhin Thanawala in San Francisco; Lisa Leff in Berkeley; John Antczak in Los Angeles; Scott Smith in Fresno; Alina Hartounian in Phoenix; and Ken Ritter in Las Vegas contributed.