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Series of storms to pummel California with rain, snow, wind; flooding, mudslides possible

Doyle Rice
USA TODAY

The USA's wild weather will shift from the East to the West this week.

California will take the brunt of the storminess: Flooding rain, yards of snow and mudslides are expected. The first of three Pacific storms barreled into the state Monday, closing roads, snarling traffic and drenching the striking teachers in Los Angeles

Interstate 5, the main north-south highway in California, was closed Monday because of heavy snow, stranding cars and trucks. 

The storms were expected to bring several rounds of heavy rain, mountain snow, gusty winds, rough surf and possible flooding through the week, the National Weather Service said. Even worse, areas burned by last year's devastating wildfires will be especially prone to mudslides.  

Los Angeles and Santa Barbara counties ordered evacuations for local burn and debris flow risk areas starting Tuesday.

Specific properties in the Woolsey Fire burn area will be evacuated beginning at 8 a.m. PST with door-knock notification and posted notice, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office said in a news release.

The Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office ordered evacuations for the Sherpa, Whittier and Thomas fire burns areas beginning at 10 a.m.

More:Palm Springs could get inch of rain this week; Holy Fire burn area under evacuation

More:Millions digging out from killer storm, bracing for more winter havoc

California officials also ordered evacuations for residents in several zones in Riverside County, east of Los Angeles: "People in these zones must go now," officials wrote in a news release. "Rainstorms carry the potential for dangerous debris flows that can send mud, boulders and trees crashing down hillsides."

The wild weather is the result of a strong jet stream over the Pacific Ocean, which will funnel an "atmospheric river" of moisture into the state. Atmospheric rivers are ribbons of water vapor that can extend thousands of miles from the tropics to the western USA. 

This photo provided by the California Department of Transportation (CalTrans) shows a ramp to Interstate 5 after it was closed due to snow Monday at Tejon Pass, an area known as the Grapevine, at Gorman in the Tehachapi Mountains.

Snow totals in the mountains will be impressive;  as much as 7 feet is possible in some spots, AccuWeather said. "In the mountains, there can be at least a couple of yards of snow in the high country of the central and southern Sierra," according to AccuWeather meteorologist Alex Sosnowski.

Snow in mountains near Los Angeles will be a boon for ski resorts, though gusty winds will make mountain travel difficult to impossible.

The rain and snow aren't all bad news because most of the state remains in a drought, according to the Weather Channel. A few areas in far Northern California and Southern California have severe or extreme drought conditions.

Contributing: Colin Atagi, Palm Springs Desert Sun

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