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- NATION, Page 27Nation NotesDISASTERSToo Much of a Good Thing
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- For bone-dry Southern California, the rains that began Feb. 5
- at first provided a welcome respite from a six-year-long
- drought. But last week the storms suddenly became too much of
- a good thing. Fifteen inches has fallen, drowning cars, streets
- and houses under rivers of water. At least eight people died,
- including a Ventura County man and his pregnant wife who were
- buried by a wave of mud.
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- The storms took residents and officials by surprise. The
- National Weather Service's Southern California office did not
- issue its first flood warning until after TV news accounts had
- already shown people being rescued from flooded highways. The
- U.S. Army Corp of Engineers said its inexperienced workers were
- slow to alert city disaster officials.
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- Worse yet, the rain fell too far south to replenish the
- state's reservoirs, which now hold only about one-third the
- normal amount of water. The federal Bureau of Reclamation,
- California's largest water supplier, said it would halt
- deliveries to farms in the San Joaquin and Sacramento valleys,
- threatening crops in two of the nation's richest agricultural
- areas.
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