Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/715968
Washington 94/75 New York 87/74 Miami 90/77 Atlanta 90/73 Detroit 86/68 Houston 86/75 Chicago 84/68 Minneapolis 86/69 Kansas City 88/69 El Paso 94/67 Denver 92/58 Billings 93/62 Los Angeles 86/63 San Francisco 74/57 Seattle 81/61 AIRQUALITYFORECAST Whatitmeans:0-50:Good; 51-100:Moderate; 101-150:Unhealthyforsensitivepeople; 151+:Unhealthyforall. Source: Airnow.gov City Today'sairquality City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W CALIFORNIA CITIES National and world forecast s-sunny,pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy,sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain,sf-snow flurries,sn-snow,i-ice City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Summary National Extremes World Extremes North and South America Asia, Australia Africa CarsonCity Hawthorne Reno Herlong Lovelock Sacramento Yuba City Napa Ukiah Chico Corning Lakeview Alturas Susanville Redding Red Bluff Laytonville Fort Bragg Point Arena Eureka Redway Mount Shasta Yreka Crescent City Ashland Shown is today's weather. Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows. Shown are today's noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. ALMANAC Precipitation Temperatures ALLERGY REPORT Pollenlevels Source: National Allergy Bureau TODAY'S UV INDEX (The higher the number, the faster skin damage will occur.) Extreme Very high High Moderate Low SUN SETTINGS, MOON PHASES Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset Hoursofsunlight River Levels SacramentoRiver Flood 7a.m. 24-hr Stage yest. chg. Lake Levels Elevation Yesterday Storage (acre-feet) Percent Capacity Q: A: THURSDAY 103° 67° FRIDAY 101° 67° Sunn y and ho t Mostly sunn y and ho t SATURDAY 97° 65° A t‑st orm ar ound in the p.m. SUNDAY 96° 65° Seasonably wa rm with sunshine TODAY 105° 68° Sunny with near‑record temperatures. A moonlit sky tonight. High ..................................................................... 100° Low ........................................................................ 67° Normal high ......................................................... 96° Normal low ........................................................... 63° Record high ........................................... 108° in 1981 Record low .............................................. 52° in 1993 Humidity noon today ........................................ 21% 24 hours through 2 p.m. yesterday ................. 0.00" Month to date ................................................... 0.00" Normal month to date ..................................... 0.07" Season to date ................................................ 23.37" Normal season to date .................................. 24.08" Red Bluff through 2 p.m. yesterday Chico .......................................................... Moderate Napa ........................................................... Moderate Red Bluff .............................................. Not available Redding ............................................... Not available Yuba City ................................................... Moderate Allergy, dust and dander today: Beneficial Grass ............. Moderate Mold .........................Low Trees ....................... Low Weeds ........... Moderate 7 Highest at 12 p.m. Today 6:23 a.m. 8:03 p.m. 7:39 p.m. 5:35 a.m. Thursday 6:24 a.m. 8:01 p.m. 8:19 p.m. 6:41 a.m. 13 hr., 40 min. Aug18 Full Aug24 Last New Sep1 First Sep9 aboveBendBridge......................27 ...........4.10 ....... -0.10 atHamiltonCity.........................148 ......129.81 ......+0.01 atOrdFerry................................114 ........97.21 ......+0.01 atRedBluffDiversionDam.......253 ......239.30 .......none atTehamaBridge ......................213 ......201.90 ....... -0.10 atVinaWoodsonBridge............183 ......167.73 ....... -0.07 BlackButte ....................448.24..............49,255 .....34.3% LakeOroville..................787.94.........2,058,651 .....55.1% LakeShasta .................1022.29.........3,342,311 .....73.4% LakeTrinity..................2267.13.........1,110,856 .....42.0% Whiskeytown...............1209.17............238,439 .....98.9% Weather Trivia ™ The greatest number of these storms form in the Pacific Ocean? Hurricanes and typhoons. Today Thursday Anaheim 93/60/s 90/62/s Bakersfield 104/74/s 103/74/s Chula Vista 87/66/s 85/66/pc Crescent City 62/49/pc 61/51/pc Death Valley 113/78/s 111/79/pc Eureka 66/51/pc 66/53/pc Fremont 84/59/pc 83/58/pc Fresno 103/70/s 103/70/s Glendale 92/63/s 90/63/s Huntington Beach 81/64/pc 79/65/pc Irvine 87/62/s 85/63/pc Lake Tahoe 83/48/t 81/49/t Long Beach 86/65/s 84/66/pc Los Angeles 86/63/s 85/64/s Mammoth Mountain 86/43/t 85/44/t Modesto 102/68/s 100/66/s Monterey 66/55/pc 66/54/pc Moreno Valley 100/63/s 98/63/s Napa 87/54/pc 84/54/pc Needles 114/87/s 111/85/pc Oakland 74/59/pc 74/59/pc Oxnard 72/59/pc 71/59/pc Redding 106/70/s 105/68/s Riverside 102/61/s 98/63/s Sacramento 96/62/s 94/61/s San Bernardino 101/65/s 99/64/s San Diego 80/68/pc 81/68/pc San Francisco 74/57/pc 72/56/pc San Jose 86/60/pc 84/60/pc San Luis Obispo 79/55/pc 78/55/pc Santa Ana 84/65/s 82/66/pc Santa Barbara 70/56/pc 68/57/pc Santa Clarita 96/63/s 94/62/s Stockton 100/63/s 97/62/s Ventura 76/58/pc 74/58/pc Yosemite Valley 93/61/t 92/60/t Today Thursday Albuquerque 88/62/t 88/62/t Atlanta 90/73/pc 91/73/t Baltimore 91/72/pc 88/70/pc Boston 86/70/pc 88/71/pc Buffalo 81/68/pc 82/69/pc Chicago 84/68/pc 88/70/pc Cincinnati 79/68/t 85/70/pc Dallas 80/71/t 80/73/t Denver 92/58/t 86/56/t Detroit 86/68/pc 87/68/pc El Paso 94/67/t 94/69/pc Fargo 86/65/s 83/61/t Honolulu 87/76/s 87/75/pc Houston 86/75/t 89/75/t Indianapolis 82/70/c 84/70/pc Kansas City 88/69/s 88/68/s Las Vegas 107/80/s 105/78/pc Louisville 82/72/t 86/71/pc Miami 90/77/pc 90/77/pc Minneapolis 86/69/s 89/72/pc New Orleans 92/78/t 90/77/t New York City 87/74/pc 88/74/pc Oklahoma City 87/69/pc 81/68/pc A press of dry air will greatly reduce, if not end, the risk of thunderstorms today from the eastern Great Lakes to New England. A zone of humid air will remain from the Deep South to part of the mid-Atlantic coast, where spotty storms will erupt in the heat of the day. Multiple storms can occur from central and eastern Texas to Delaware and southern New Jersey. Where storms persist, the risk of flash flooding will be the greatest. Another pocket of thunderstorms is in store for the central Great Lakes. Most of the central and northern Plains can expect a rain-free day. High .......................... 115° in Imperial, CA Low ............................... 30° in Walden, CO High ........................... 122° in Basrah, Iraq Low ...... 8° in Summit Station, Greenland Bogota 68/51/pc 66/51/t Buenos Aires 65/44/s 67/42/s Caracas 88/77/pc 86/78/pc Ensenada 93/67/pc 90/65/pc Mexico City 71/59/t 73/56/t Montreal 80/63/pc 83/63/pc Rio de Janeiro 89/73/s 79/71/pc Tijuana 89/67/pc 87/65/pc Toronto 81/65/pc 84/65/pc Vancouver 74/58/s 80/63/s Orlando 90/75/t 91/74/t Philadelphia 92/75/pc 90/74/pc Phoenix 107/85/pc 105/82/pc Pittsburgh 78/67/c 83/67/pc Portland, ME 82/63/pc 87/64/pc Portland, OR 83/61/pc 96/73/s St. Louis 88/72/pc 89/72/s Salt Lake City 96/71/t 96/70/t Seattle 81/61/s 89/66/s Tucson 103/77/pc 101/76/pc Washington, DC 94/75/pc 90/74/pc Cairo 94/74/s 96/73/s Casablanca 86/67/s 85/66/s Johannesburg 69/44/s 69/44/s Kinshasa 86/70/t 85/70/t Lagos 84/76/t 85/77/t Nairobi 76/51/pc 77/54/c Tripoli 95/75/s 101/75/s Baghdad 111/77/s 110/77/s Beijing 83/72/c 79/74/sh Hong Kong 87/81/t 86/80/r Jerusalem 80/65/s 83/69/s Kabul 88/60/s 88/60/s Manila 86/80/t 87/79/t Melbourne 58/46/sh 68/53/pc New Delhi 95/81/t 93/82/t Seoul 93/79/pc 93/79/pc Singapore 89/81/t 90/79/c Sydney 73/53/pc 71/51/s Tehran 93/72/s 94/70/s Tokyo 90/77/t 87/78/t Amsterdam 73/53/s 75/55/pc Athens 93/75/s 93/74/s Belgrade 83/63/t 80/62/t Berlin 70/52/c 70/53/c Budapest 76/54/t 77/57/pc Dublin 65/56/t 66/58/sh London 78/58/pc 76/59/pc Madrid 92/66/pc 93/66/s Moscow 71/56/sh 79/61/c Paris 86/64/pc 78/61/t Rome 79/65/pc 81/67/pc Stockholm 61/54/sh 62/53/sh Vienna 75/55/t 78/59/t Zurich 77/56/t 75/56/t 93/53 97/56 96/64 98/64 99/57 96/62 99/62 87/54 103/57 101/67 103/67 91/53 95/49 96/56 106/70 105/68 99/60 72/54 74/53 66/51 94/56 96/55 98/61 62/49 96/62 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016 ByMichaelKunzelman, Melinda Deslatte and Rebecca Santana The Associated Press BATON ROUGE, LA. Author- ities went door to door and car to car to check for bod- ies Tuesday, and homeown- ers began the heartbreak- ing task of gathering up soaked family photos and mucking out houses dank with bayou mud, as the floodwaters started to re- cede across parts of south- ern Louisiana. Even as the water fell in some areas, it was ris- ing in other places down- stream, where people furi- ously filled sandbags and fled to shelters. Officials painted a stark picture of the crisis so far: at least 40,000 homes dam- aged and 10 people killed in some of the worst flood- ing in Louisiana history, touched off by as much as 2 feet of rain in 48 hours. Over 30,000 people have been rescued since Friday, with more being brought to safety by the hour. There were scattered re- ports of looting, and Gov. John Bel Edwards said parishes with widespread damage would be placed under curfew beginning Tuesday night. The smell of muddy wa- ter hung heavy in the air as people donned surgical masks and began the back- breaking job of ripping out soggy carpet, drywall and insulation. They cleaned out spiders and cockroaches that had bubbled up through the sewer grates. Raymond Lieteau, 48, returned to his home in the Woodlands neighbor- hood of Baton Rouge to survey the damage Tues- day and begin cleaning up. The water line on a mirror showed that he had more than 5 feet of water inside his home. "My furniture is all over the place," he said. "It's just amazing." The bedroom floors were buckled and the walls bowed, and the swimming pool, once a crystal-clear blue, was filled with brown water. His wife, Daniella Lete- lier, put on rubber gloves and began sorting through stacks of family photos, re- moving them from their sleeves and placing them on a table to dry out. Many of the photos were of her 15-year-old daugh- ter, Olivia. "I can't live without her pictures. It breaks my heart," she said. Officials started going house to house to make sure everyone was ac- counted for and searched the countless cars that had been caught in the flood- ing. "I don't know we have a good handle on the num- ber of people who are miss- ing," the governor said. About 40,000 people had signed up for assis- tance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and eight parishes were added to the federal disaster declaration, bring- ing the total to 12. In Livingston Parish, one of the hardest-hit areas with about 138,000 people, an official estimated that 75 percent of the homes were a total loss. In Tangipahoa Parish, Parish President Robby Miller said at least 7,500 homes had flood damage, meaning they took on any- where from an inch of wa- ter to water up to the roof. That number could go as high as 10,000, he said, which would be about a quarter of the homes in the parish. Rivers and creeks were still dangerously bloated in areas south of Baton Rouge as the water made its way toward the Gulf of Mexico. In Ascension Parish, some small towns were already inundated. In St. James Parish, au- thorities called for volun- teers to help fill sandbags. The governor said he is worried about "battle fa- tigue" setting in as rescu- ers and residents deal with day upon day of stress. The trauma was evident among people who went back Tuesday. David Key used a small boat to get to his house in Prairieville and said it had taken on 5 inches of "muddy, nasty bayou wa- ter." There were fish and thousands of spiders, and mold had started to grow. The backyard was still un- der water, with only the safety net surrounding his children's trampoline vis- ible. "I'm not going to lie, I cried uncontrollably," he said. "But you have to push forward and make it through. Like everybody says, you still have your family." DESTRUCTION In flooded Louisiana, a cleanup and a search for bodies MAXBECHERER—THEASSOCIATEDPRESS David Key boats away from his flooded home a er reviewing the damage in Prairieville, La., Tuesday. Key, an insurance adjuster, fled his home as the flood water was rising with his wife and three children and returned today to assess the damage. Welcome to the 96 th Annual Tehama District Fair ★ ★ ★ Country Fair USA ★ ★ ★ September 22 nd -25 th , 2016 Thurs. Sept 22 nd Fri. Sept. 23 rd Sat. Sept. 24 th TheTehamaDistrictFairgroundsisproudto present the Red Bluff Monster Truck Spectacular 3 Night Event at this year's FAIR! Line-up including The Patriot, Titan, Hooligan, Raminator, and Terminator, just to name a few, are crashing the Fair and taking over the arena to establish their dominance and compete in the thrilling spectacular style that only the BIG Trucks can bring!! All tickets purchased for the Red Bluff Monster Truck Spectacular include Fair entry for that day! Red Bluff Monster Truck Spectacular For tickets go to www.tehamadistrictfair.com or call 530 527-5920 EarlyMovers Ages: 6-18 months Wednesdays 10:00 am-11am Teeter Toddlers Ages: 18 mo-3 yrs Wednesdays 11am-Noon Wiggle Worms Ages: 4-6 Monday & Wednesday 4:00 pm-5:00 pm Dyanamic Development Ages: 7-12 Monday & Wednesday 5:00 pm-6:00 pm Formoreinformationandpricing contact the staff at TFFC (530) 528-8656 2498 S. Main St., Red Bluff, CA 96080 August is Tehama County Customer Appreciation Month 25yearsprofessional experience. QualityWork Very Reasonable Rates Red Bluff Transmission • Automatic • Manual • Computer Diagnosis • Clutches • Transfer Cases • CV Axles CALL TODAY! 529-4493 440 Antelope Blvd. #6 Bob's Youcantmissus... Weonly moved 50 feet!! | WEATHER | REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2016 8 B
