The California Highway Patrol (CHP) confirmed that heavy rains in a remote desert area of California has washed away an elevated part of Interstate 10 including a highway.
The CHP told the Los Angeles Times that 30 feet of the eastbound highway “is washed away and bridge is gone.”
The highway, the most direct route between Los Angeles and Phoenix, averages more than 20,000 cars a day. Now the vehicles will have to travel hundreds of miles out of the way Interstate 8 or Interstate 40.
Forecasters say the storm was a foreshadowing of what could be striking California later this year with a strong El Nino season. Tropical Storm Dolores, which roared far off the Mexican and California coasts, allowed for muggy and rainy weather to reach an area decimated by crippling drought.
“Even though Dolores is a pretty good wake-up call for us, we should start preparing for late August or early September,” Stuart Seto, an National Weather Service specialist, said to the Los Angeles Times.
The storms that blew through Southern California brought flash flooding in San Bernardino and Riverside counties. The storms brought dangerous lightning, hail and high surf to the region.
The storm was so rare for this time of the year that the Anaheim Angels baseball team had a game against the Boston Red Sox rained out…the first rainout for the team in 20 years and 1,609 consecutive home games.