Tuesday, January 31, 2017

[ Volcano ] File - ka.txt

ka.txt

Keep-Alive Message

This is a Keep-Alive message to continue this Yahoo! Groups email list through slow messaging periods.

000.





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[ Volcano ]


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[californiadisasters] File - Abbreviations & Meanings

Here is a list of internet abreviations and their meanings which will help you to better understand what others are saying and will give you some abreviated options for commonly used expressions and terms.

AAR At any rate
AAR can also mean "After Action Report", used in emergency management fields
AAS Alive and smiling
ADN Any day now
AEAP As early as possible
AFAIK As far as I know
AFK Away from keyboard
AISB As it should be
AOTA All of the above
ASAP As soon as possible
AWOL Absent Without Leave
B4 Before
B4N Bye for now
BAK Back at keyboard
BAU Business as usual
BBIAF Be back in a few
BBIAM Be back in a minute
BBL Be back later
BC Because or variously, Battalion Chief
BCNU Be seein' you
BFN Bye for now
BOL Best of luck
BRB Be right back
BTA But then again
BTW By the way
CHAOS Chief Has Arrived On Scene
CMIIW Correct me if I'm wrong
CMON Come one
CT CalTrans (California Department of Transportation)
CU See you
CUA See you around
CUL See you later
CUL8R See you later
CWYL Chat with you later
CYO See you online
DC Division Chief
DEGT Don't even go there
DIKU Do I know you?
DQMOT Don't quote me on this
DTS Don't think so
EM Emergency Management
EMA E-mail address
EOM End of message
F2F Face to face
FISH First in, still here
FAMCL Falling of my chair laughing
FC Fire Captain
FD Fire Department
FITB Fill in the blank
FM Fire Marshall
FUBAR Fudged Up Beyond All Recognition
FWIW For what it's worth
FYI For your information
GA Go ahead
GAL Get a life
GB Goodbye
GFI Go for it
GG Gotta Go
GIAR Give it a rest
GMTA Great minds think alike
GOL Giggling out loud
GR&D Grinning, running and ducking
GTRM Going to read mail
HAGN Have a good night
HAGO Have a good one
HHIS Head hanging in shame
HRU How are you?
HTH Hope this helps
IAC In any case
IAP Incident Action Plan
IB I'm back
IC I see, or variously Incident Command
ICP Incident Command Post
ICBW It could be worse
ICS Incident Command System
ICT Incident Command Team (CALFIRE term)
IDK I don't know
IDTS I don't think so
IIRC If I remember correctly
ILU I love you
ILY I love you
IM Instant message
IMHO In my humble opinion
IMNSHO In my not so humble opinion
IMO In my opinion
IMT Incident Management Team (USFS term)
INAL I'm not a lawyer
IOW In other words
IRMC I rest my case
ITA I totally agree
IUSS If you say so
IYKWIM If you know what I mean
IYO In your opinion
IYSS If you say so
JAC Just a sec
JIK Just in case
JJA Just joking around
JK Just kidding
KOTC Kiss on the cheek
KNIM Know what I mean?
L8R Later
LD Later, dude
LE Law Enforcement
LEO Law Enforcement Officer
LMAO Laughing my a** off
LOL Laughing out loud
LTM Laugh to myself
LTNS Long time no see
MorF Male or female?
MUSM Miss you so much
NBD No big deal
NIMBY Not in my back yard
NMH Not much here
NOYB None of your business
NN Night-Night
NP No problem
NRN No response necessary
NW No way
OIC Oh, I see
OEM Office Of Emergency Management
OES Office of Emergency Services
OMG Oh my God
OO Over and out
OOTD One of these days
OTOH On the other hand
OTTOMH Off the top of my head
PD Police Department
PDQ Pretty darn quick
PLMK Please let me know
PIMP Peeing in my pants
PMFI Pardon me for interrupting
PMFJI Pardon me for jumping in
POAHF Put on a happy face
PTL Praise the Lord
PXT Please explain that
PU That stinks!
RL Real life
RME Rolling my eyes
ROTFL Rolling on the floor laughing
RSN Real soon now
SMHID Scratching my head in disbelief
SNAFU Situation Normal ~ All Fudged Up
SO Sheriff's Office
SOMY Sick of me yet?
SOS Same Old Shtuff
SOTMG Short of time, must go
SPST Same place, same time
SSDD Same stuff, different day
ST or S/T Strike Team
STW Search the Web
SUITM See you in the morning
SUL See you later
SUP What's up?
SYL See you later
TAFN That's all for now
TAM Tomorrow a.m.
TC Take care
THX Thanks
TIA Thanks in advance
TLK2UL8R Talk to you later
TMI Too much information
TMWFI Take my word for it
TPM Tomorrow p.m.
TPTB The powers that be
TSDMF Tears streaming down my face
TTFN Ta ta for now
TTTT These things take time
TTYL Talk to you later
TTYS Talk to you soon
TU Thank you
TY Thank you
TYT Take your time
TYVM Thank you very much
UGTBK You've got to be kidding
UW You're welcome
WAM Wait a minute
WAYF Where are you from?
WB Welcome back
WIIFM What's in it for me?
WTC World Trade Center
WTG Way to go
WTH What the heck?
WTSHTF When the s*** hits the fan
WU? What's up?
WUF? Where are you from?
WWJD What would Jesus do?
WWYC Write when you can
WYSIWYG What you see is what you get
YBS You'll be sorry
YGBKM You gotta be kidding me
YW You're welcome


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[californiadisasters] File - Too Many Messages?

This group frequently has a HIGH MESSAGE VOLUME during major incidents.

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[californiadisasters] File - California Disasters DISCUSSION GROUP

Extended discussion threads, chit-chat with other group members or slightly off-topic messages should be posted to the California Disasters DISCUSSION group, which can be found here:
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All members are urged to join this sister-group and use it to post messages that are not relevant to the purpose of the main list.

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[Geology2] File - Rules

Attention Group!


Rule #1 is Rule #1 on all Yahoo groups: NEVER argue with a list-owner or list-moderator! This group is a benevolent dictatorship, NOT a democracy.

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Rule #11 is give proper attribution to other groups if you forward to this group any information or a post from another group in part or in whole. It's the courteous thing to do!



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[Geology2] M=3.5 earthquake strikes near creeping San Andreas and Calaveras Faults



M=3.5 earthquake strikes near creeping San Andreas and Calaveras Faults

By David Jacobson, Temblor


San-Andreas-Fault-creep
The San Andreas Fault cuts through DeRose Winery in Hollister, CA. The resulting creep (steady slip) has progressively offset this culvert over the past 30 years. (Photo from geologycafe.com)

 

At 9:35 p.m. local time last night (January 30), a small M=3.5 earthquake shook the city of Hollister, CA, and was felt as far away as Santa Cruz and Monterey. According to the USGS ShakeMap, only light shaking was felt, and around 300 people recorded feeling the quake on the USGS website.

This earthquake occurred between the creeping sections of the San Andreas and Calaveras faults. The fact that they are creeping means that there is very slow continuous motion along the faults. Areas such as this do not tend to have large earthquakes as stress does not build up as much as it does on locked sections.

Even though this earthquake occurred close to the San Andreas and Calaveras faults, based its focal mechanism, it appears to have occurred along a secondary fault. We would expect an earthquake on either the San Andreas or Calaveras faults to have almost pure strike-slip motion. While this quake was primarily strike-slip, it did also have a large component of extensional motion. Nonetheless, because of its location, it merits a closer look.

Because this earthquake occurred in the creeping section of two major faults, we thought we'd check to see if this could be part of a larger creeping event. However, the closest GPS station to the epicenter did not pick up any movement. Therefore, we believe this was an isolated event not associated with larger movement. Having said that, we will monitor the area and if there are more earthquakes in the section, we will be sure to update the situation.

san-andreas-fault-map-calaveras-fault-map-california-earthquake
This Temblor map shows that the epicenter of the M=3.5 earthquake on January 30 has a Temblor Hazard Rank of 99. This means the area is extremely susceptible to shaking. This is due to the convergence of the San Andreas and Calaveras faults.

 

The exact location of this earthquake has a Temblor Hazard Rank of 99. This means it is one of the most earthquake-prone areas in the country, and has a high likelihood of experiencing strong shaking. So, a small quake here is not a surprising event, and residents of the area are accustomed to shaking.

http://temblor.net/earthquake-insights/m3-5-earthquake-strikes-near-creeping-san-andreas-and-calaveras-faults-2325/
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Posted by: Lin Kerns <linkerns@gmail.com>



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[Geology2] Prediction of large earthquake probability improved



Prediction of large earthquake probability improved

Date:
January 30, 2017
Source:
Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Summary:
Scientists have developed a mathematical law to explain the size distribution of earthquakes, even in the cases of large-scale earthquakes such as those which occurred in Sumatra (2004) and in Japan (2011).

As part of the "Research in Collaborative Mathematics" project run by the Obra Social "la Caixa," researchers of the Mathematics Research Centre (CRM) and the UAB have developed a mathematical law to explain the size distribution of earthquakes, even in the cases of large-scale earthquakes such as those which occurred in Sumatra (2004) and in Japan (2011).

The probability of an earthquake occurring exponentially decreases as its magnitude value increases. Fortunately, mild earthquakes are more probable than devastatingly large ones. This relation between probability and earthquake magnitude follows a mathematical curve called the Gutenberg-Richter law, and helps seismologists predict the probabilities of an earthquake of a specific magnitude occurring in some part of the planet.

The law however lacks the necessary tools to describe extreme situations. For example, although the probability of an earthquake being of the magnitude of 12 is zero, since technically this would imply the earth breaking in half, the mathematics of the Gutenberg-Richter law do not consider impossible a 14-magnitude earthquake.

"The limitations of the law are determined by the fact that the Earth is finite, and the law describes ideal systems, in a planet with an infinite surface," explains Isabel Serra, first author of the article, researcher at CRM and affiliate lecturer of the UAB Department of Mathematics.

To overcome these shortages, researchers studied a small modification in the Gutenberg-Richter law, a term which modified the curve precisely in the area in which probabilities were the smallest. "This modification has important practical effects when estimating the risks or evaluating possible economic losses. Preparing for a catastrophe where the losses could be, in the worst of the cases, very high in value, is not the same as not being able to calculate an estimated maximum value," clarifies co-author Álvaro Corral, researcher at the Mathematics Research Centre and the UAB Department of Mathematics.

Obtaining the mathematical curve which best fits the registered data on earthquakes is not an easy task when dealing with large tremors. From 1950 to 2003 there were only seven earthquakes measuring higher than 8.5 on the Richter scale and since 2004 there have only been six. Although we are now in a more active period following the Sumatra earthquake, there are very few cases and that makes it statistically a poorer period. Thus, the mathematical treatment of the problem becomes much more complex than when there is an abundance of data. For Corral, "this is where the role of mathematics is fundamental to complement the research of seismologists and guarantee the accuracy of the studies." According to the researcher, the approach currently used to analyse seismic risk is not fully correct and, in fact, there are many risk maps which are downright incorrect, "which is what happened with the Tohoku earthquake of 2011, where the area contained an under-dimensioned risk." "Our approach has corrected some things, but we are still far from being able to give correct results in specific regions," Corral continues.

The mathematical expression of the law at the seismic moment, proposed by Serra and Corral, meets all the conditions needed to determine both the probability of smaller earthquakes and of large ones, by adjusting itself to the most recent and extreme cases of Tohoku, in Japan (2011) and Sumatra, in Indonesia (2004); as well as to determine negligible probabilities for earthquakes of disproportionate magnitudes.

The derived Gutenberg-Richter law has also been used to begin to explore its applications in the financial world. Isabel Serra worked in this field before beginning to study earthquakes mathematically. "The risk assessment of a firm's economic losses is a subject insurance companies take very seriously, and the behaviour is similar: the probability of suffering losses decreases in accordance with the increase in volume of losses, according to a law that is similar to that of Gutenberg-Richter, but there are limit values which these laws do not take into consideration, since no matter how big the amount, the probability of losses of that amount never results in zero" Serra explains. "That makes the 'expected value of losses' enormous. To solve this, changes would have to be made to the law similar to those we introduced to the law on earthquakes."


Story Source:

Materials provided by Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Isabel Serra, Álvaro Corral. Deviation from power law of the global seismic moment distribution. Scientific Reports, 2017; 7: 40045 DOI: 10.1038/srep40045

Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. "Prediction of large earthquake probability improved." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 30 January 2017. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/01/170130100131.htm>.


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Posted by: Lin Kerns <linkerns@gmail.com>



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[californiadisasters] On This Date In California Weather History (January 31)



2003: It was 97° F in Riverside, 96° F in Santa Ana and 92° F in Escondido, each the highest temperature on record for January.

2002: Temperatures plummeted on 1.30 and on this day.
It was 13° F at Shelter Valley, 17° F at Campo, 22° F at Ramona and 28° F at Escondido.
Crops were damaged in northern San Diego County.

1999: Four funnel clouds were reported in the Valley: two north of Bakersfield, one near the Fresno Yosemite International Airport and another near Merced.

1995: Fresno recorded 0.01" of precipitation.
This marked the 21st day of the month to record measurable precipitation, a record for any month of the year.

1984: High of 82° F in Bakersfield, tied for warmest high ever in the month of January (also on January 16, 1932).

1979: A winter storm that started on 1.30 and ended on this day spread 2"-4" of rainfall in 24 hours over much of coastal Southern California, and 2" of snow in Palm Springs.
On this day snow fell heavily in Palm Springs and eight inches fell at Lancaster.
All major interstates into LA (I-5, I-15, and I-10) were closed.
Snow drifts shut down Interstate 10 on both sides of Palm Springs, isolating the city.
Schools were closed and hundreds of cars were abandoned.
A snow and rain mix was reported in Borrego Springs.
Mt. Laguna received two feet of snow and Julian one foot.
Winds up to 60 mph blew in the San Diego Mountains.
A tornado touched down in Santa Ana, and possibly occurred elsewhere.
Golf ball size hail and widespread snow were also reported during the storm.
4.82" of rain fell in National City, 4.25" in La Mesa, 3.30" at SDSU, and 3.78" in El Cajon.
Flooding occurred along Silver Strand highway, in Fashion Valley, also in Spring Valley, Lemon Grove, Lakeside and Carlsbad.
Lake Hodges overflowed.
Numerous power outages resulted.
2.57" of rain fell in San Diego on this day, the seventh wettest calendar day on record and the wettest January day.
56" of snow fell in Big Bear Lake from this day to 2.2, the greatest storm snowfall on record.
26" fell on this day, the greatest daily snowfall on record for January and the second greatest daily amount on record.
This snowfall also occurred on 2.17.1990.
It snowed 1.5" in Palm Springs, the second greatest daily snowfall on record.
The only other daily measurable snowfall on record was 2" (the greatest daily amount on record) on 1.11.1930.

1979: Significant snow fell in the Kern County desert from the 30th into the 31st.
Total accumulations from this event included 9" at China Lake NAS and Mojave with 8" at Randsburg and 4.5" at Inyokern.

1979: Snow fell continuously for 23 hours and 31 minutes in Las Vegas, NV on this date with a storm total of 7.8".

1976: It was 83° F at Paso Robles setting a record high for the month.

1969: The morning low at South Lake Tahoe was -13° F.

1963: Big Sur received 9.23" of rain -- its greatest one day rainfall.


1938: 30" of snow fell at Tahoe City (west shore Lake Tahoe).

1916: Bridgeport had a morning low temperature of -36° F, its all-time record low temperature.

Source: NWS San Francisco/Monterey, Hanford, Reno, Las Vegas, & San Diego

--


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Posted by: Kim Noyes <kimnoyes@gmail.com>


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Monday, January 30, 2017

[californiadisasters] On This Date In California Weather History (January 30)



2002: Temperatures plummeted on this day and on 1.31.
It was 13° F at Shelter Valley, 17° F at Campo, 22° F at Ramona and 28° F at Escondido.
Crops were damaged in northern San Diego County.

2000: Snowburst: 10" of snow fell at Lodgepole and 13" at Tuolumne Meadows in under 12 hours.

1998:
High surf caused coastal damage (SoCal).

1993:
A funnel cloud was observed over Mission Bay.

1990: Two pilots reported a tornado over open desert about 22 miles east of Las Vegas, NV.

1985: Bakersfield had its' 21st day this month with dense fog, a record for January and tying December 1985 for the most days in any month.

1979: A winter storm that started on this day and ended on 1.31 spread two to four inches of rainfall in 24 hours over much of coastal Southern California, and two inches of snow in Palm Springs.
Golf ball size hail and widespread snow was also reported during the storm.
Flooding occurred along Silver Strand highway, in Fashion Valley, also in Spring Valley, Lemon Grove, Lakeside and Carlsbad.
Lake Hodges overflowed.

1976:
High of 84° F at Ash Mountain (Tulare Co.).

1969: Fresno recorded 0.04" of rain, bringing the total to 8.56" for the month.
This made January 1969 the wettest month ever at Fresno. In all, 22 days recorded precipitation.

1968: 10.9" of snow fell at Reno, NV.

1963: Snow and rain continued to fall on Northern California.
A massive traffic jam clogged Highway 99 12 miles north of Redding when trucks and cars got stuck attempting to drive up a hilly stretch without chains.
24" of new snow covered the Mt. Shasta Ski Bowl; skiing conditions were excellent.

1962: Monterey reported a high temperature of 81° F.

1957: The high temperature of 32° F on this day in Victorville is the lowest high temperature on record.
This also occurred on 12.15.1957 and 12.11.1972.

1937: 14" of snow fell at Carson City, NV, with 10.1" of snow being reported at Reno, NV.

1916: Heavy rain that began on 1.25 and ended on this day exacerbated the flooding earlier in the month.
Monthly rainfall totals for 1.1916 ranged from 7.56" at San Diego to 57.91" at Dorman's Ranch (in the San Bernardino Mountains, 2,500 feet elev.).
5" fell in less than 12 hours in San Diego.
Extensive flooding occurred all over Southern California, the worst to date and it resulted in 28 total deaths in the region, 22 in San Diego County.
This is the most destructive and deadly weather event in San Diego County History.
The Lower Otay Dam broke sending a 40-foot wall of water downstream, killing 15.
A few others drowned in Mission Valley and in the San Luis Rey River.
The Sweetwater Dam also broke.
Every large bridge in San Diego County but one was seriously damaged or destroyed.
Four drowned in Orange County, two in a cottage floating down the Santa Ana River.
Two drowned in San Bernardino County.
Total damage was nearly $8 million (1916 dollars).

1916: The morning low at Tahoe City was -15° F.

Source: NWS San Francisco/Monterey, Hanford, Reno, Las Vegas, & San Diego and the Redding Record-Searchlight

--


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Posted by: Kim Noyes <kimnoyes@gmail.com>


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[californiadisasters] 2000 Alaska Air 261 Disaster, Tuesday, 31 January 2017



"2000 Alaska Air 261 Disaster" reminder
When
Tuesday, 31 January 2017
12:15 AM to 12:15 AM
(GMT) Greenwich Mean Time - Dublin / Edinburgh / Lisbon / London
Where
Offshore of Anacapa Island in the Santa Barbara Channel
Notes
On this date in 2000, Alaska Air Flight 261 experienced a catastrophic mechanical failure in the form of a worn jackscrew controlling a horizontal flap in the tail. The jet aircraft plummeted nose first into the ocean in sight of other passenger jet aircraft who were watching as they flew past the tragedy. The MD-83 was carrying a crew of five with 83 passengers and all aboard were killed.
From
californiadisasters   Calendar


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[Volcano_Vista_HS] VVHS Announcements--Monday, January 30, 2017



Congratulations to our Yearbook, Newspaper and Literary Magazine students for winning the NMAA State Publications Award. This is Volcono's 3rd Blue trophy for publications in the past 4 years.

 

HOLLY HAWKINS WEEK: Jan 30 – Feb 4

Spirit Days

Today: Dress to Unimpress

Tuesday: Dress like a teacher

Wednesday: Wacky Socks, Sandals

Thursday: Throw Back (70's, 80's, 90's, 2000's)

  • Thursday evening the Unified Hawks will be playing Cleveland in the Ring of Fire during halftime of the boys basketball game. Let's fill the gym in support of our Unified Hawks.

Friday: Fancy Friday

 

DANCE: the first annual Holly Hawkins dance will be on Saturday February 4. Tickets will go on sale January 30th for $15.00 or bring a new pair of socks (must have the sales tags on them) and the tickets will be $10.00 each. If you are bringing a guest you can find the permission slip in the activities office or online at the VVHS website. Tickets will go on sale Monday, January 30th during lunch. Please have your VVHS ID with you.

 

HOLLY HAWKINS COURT

You may donate socks to the following faculty members:

Mrs. Allen                    Mr. Ben Brown

Ms. Corbitt                   Mr. Crawley

Ms. Gonzales              Mr. Cuevas

Ms. Hahn                    Mr. Lieberman

Mrs. Martin                 Mr. Lonz

Ms. Rohr                    Mr. Neidigk

Ms. Schrader             Mr. Woods

The teacher that has collected the most socks by Feb. 2 will be crowned the King or Queen.

 

CAMPUS CLEANUP Any student interested in participating in campus cleanup stop by Mrs. Leahy's room, F207 and sign up. You can help clean the campus every Monday afternoon from 2:30 to 3:30. Students that need community service hours please take advantage of this opportunity.

 

ATTENTION ARTISTS, designers, trendsetters, fashionistas and sneakerheads:   It is time for the 2017 Vans Custom Culture Shoe Contest.  The grand prize winners will have their art featured on a limited edition pair of Vans and win $50,000 for their school.  There will be an informational meeting today in the Art Room, G113.

 

COUNSELING:

  • ASVAB: The armed service entrance exam, the ASVAB, will be administered here at Volcano Vista on Tuesday, February 7th.  See Major Campbell in B154, the JROTC classroom, to sign up

  • Students taking  ECademy online classes this spring, need to be fully engaged in your course work.  If you have failed to log on and are not engaged in the online course you will be dropped from your course as a no show on Thursday February 2nd.  

 

ATHLETICS:

  • SOFTBALL tryouts will be Jan 30-31st. A current physical and grade check needed to try out. Be at the fields at 2:50 after school for tryouts. For any questions see Officer Lujan

  • THE TRACK & FIELD season starts in February.  If you would like to be part of the team see coach Schrader in H108.

  • TENNIS: Any girls interested in playing tennis should attend pre-season hitting sessions Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday from 3:30 to 5 p.m. this week at Sierra Vista Courts.  Tryouts will begin on Monday, February 6.  Players need a current physical form to try out.

  • ATTENTION BOYS SOCCER players, if you are interested in playing for the VVHS boys soccer team next fall, there will be an information meeting on Wednesday, February 1 in room A102 at lunch.  If you are unable to attend, see Coach Thiebaut in A121 – 9th grade office.

     

 

LONG ADVISORY:  We will be on a long advisory schedule tomorrow. Please report to your advisory class. Freshmen, Sophomores, and Juniors will be receiving registration information for the 2017-2018 school year. Seniors will be receiving graduation info and will have their senior class group photo taken.

 

 

And remember

As always

It's Great to be a Hawk!



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Posted by: ssteckbeck@yahoo.com


For more information, go to our web site: http://www.volcanovistahawks.com




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Sunday, January 29, 2017

[californiadisasters] On This Date In California Weather History (January 29)



2002: Snow flurries were observed in the Valley at Los Banos, Madera, Hanford, McFarland and Shafter.

2002: Light snow was reported in the southern Inland Empire during a storm that started on 1.28 and ended on this day.

1998: A line of strong thunderstorms dropped small hail up to 3" deep in north-central Fresno. 
A peak wind gust of 41 mph was clocked at the Fresno Yosemite International Airport. 
Over 7,000 customers in the city lost power and nursery tents were knocked down in North Fresno. 
This line of storms also dropped hail and caused power outages to 5,000 customers in Tulare County.

1998: A waterspout moved ashore on Moonlight Beach in Encinitas and became a tornado causing property damage.

1997: Santa Ana winds blew 100 mph at Fremont Canyon and 87 mph at Rialto. 
Big rigs were blown over.

1995: The San Joaquin Valley (Hanford) Weather Forecast Office opens with initial staffing.

1986: Daily record high of 64° F set at Reno, NV.

1983: A series of storms produced surf up to 16 feet from 1.22 to this day. 
Several piers collapsed. 
Damage was done to numerous businesses and homes. 
Several injuries occurred as people were swept off rocks.

1981: 20" of snow fell at Donner Memorial State Park (near Truckee).

1980: A powerful storm struck Southern California with flooding rains and damaging winds. 
In San Diego County 5.6" fell at Lake Henshaw, 5.48" at Palomar Mountain, 5" in Ramona, 4.91" in Julian, 4.24" in Fallbrook, 3.35" in Mt. Laguna with no snow, 3.24" in Escondido, 2.35" in Oceanside, 1.91" at Pt. Loma, 1.8" in San Diego and 1.37" in Borrego Springs. 
Widespread catastrophic flooding occurred all over the county. 
Numerous homes, businesses and streets were flooded. 
Two died in the floods. 
Wind gusts reached 74 mph unofficially at Lake Murray and 52 mph at San Diego. 
Coastal areas reported 55 knot (63 mph) winds. 
At least 15 boats were sunken or severely damaged in Mission Bay and San Diego Bay. 
A dock was smashed at Mission Bay. At least 86 power outages occurred across the county.

1979: The morning low temperature at South Lake Tahoe was -20° F.

1979: A major outbreak of cold air descended on the region. 
It was a bitter -25° F at Big Bear Lake, probably the lowest temperature ever recorded in Southern California
Remarkably, the high was 28° F, a rise of 53° F on one winter's day.

1969:
 This day marked the end of 11 consecutive days (the most on record) of measurable precipitation in Palomar Mountain, which started on 1.19.

1957: A waterspout was sited off Ocean Beach. 
Two funnel clouds were observed over North Island (possibly the waterspout) and Mt. Soledad – La Jolla. Heavy snow fell: 24" at Mt. Laguna, 21" at Palomar Mountain, 20" at Lake Cuyamaca, 12" at Julian, 10" at Mesa Grande, and 6" at Lake Henshaw. 
The snowstorm stranded 200 people north of LA.

1949: Cedarville recorded a morning low of -11° F.

1922: The high temperature of 43° F in LA on this day was the lowest high temperature on record.

1916: Heavy rain that began on 1.25 and ended on 1.30 exacerbated the flooding earlier in the month. 
Monthly rainfall totals for 1.1916 ranged from 7.56" at San Diego to 57.91" at Dorman's Ranch (in the San Bernardino Mountains, 2,500 feet elev.). 
5" fell in less than 12 hours in San Diego. 
Extensive flooding occurred all over Southern California, the worst to date and it resulted in 28 total deaths in the region, 22 in San Diego County. 
This is the most destructive and deadly weather event in San Diego County History
The Lower Otay Dam broke sending a 40-foot wall of water downstream, killing 15. 
A few others drowned in Mission Valley and in the San Luis Rey River. 
The Sweetwater Dam also broke. 
Every large bridge in San Diego County but one was seriously damaged or destroyed. 
Four drowned in Orange County, two in a cottage floating down the Santa Ana River. 
Two drowned in San Bernardino County. Total damage was nearly $8 million (1916 dollars).

1916: Bakersfield recorded 0.04" of rain. 
This was the 15th day of the month with measurable precipitation, setting a record the most days with measurable precipitation for any month. 
This record was tied in January 1995.

1881: 4.67" of rainfall fell in downtown San Francisco -- the second greatest amount ever. 


Source: NWS San Francisco/Monterey, Hanford, Reno, Las Vegas, & San Diego

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Posted by: Kim Noyes <kimnoyes@gmail.com>


Be sure to check out our Links Section at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/californiadisasters/links
Please join our Discussion Group at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/californiadisasters_discussion/ for topical but extended discussions started here or for less topical but nonetheless relevant messages.





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[californiadisasters] Emergency Manager's Weekly Report, Jan 27 edition [1 Attachment]

[Attachment(s) from Steve Detwiler included below]

Good Afternoon,

This week's edition is now available at: https://sites.google.com/site/emergencymanagersweeklyreport/

 

Steve Detwiler

EM Weekly Report Editor



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Attachment(s) from Steve Detwiler | View attachments on the web

1 of 1 File(s)


Posted by: Steve Detwiler <steveorange2011@gmail.com>


Be sure to check out our Links Section at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/californiadisasters/links
Please join our Discussion Group at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/californiadisasters_discussion/ for topical but extended discussions started here or for less topical but nonetheless relevant messages.





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