Some areas inland have been warned that an extreme 'firehose' of rainfall could deliver as much as eight to 16 inches of rain throughout California, including in the Los Angeles basin and the Sierra Nevada and Transverse mountain ranges.
There are a couple of problems;
LA County infrastructure really isn't built to handle large amounts of rain, mostly because it almost never rains there.
Also, pretty much all the heavily populated areas are in a basin that the Transverse Range/San Gabriel Mountains drain directly into.
!
That being said, this should be pretty interesting to watch. I'm sure the Good Lord has his reasons.
>Some areas inland have been warned that an extreme 'firehose' of rainfall could deliver as much as eight to 16 inches of rain throughout California, including in the Los Angeles basin and the Sierra Nevada and Transverse mountain ranges.
There are a couple of problems;
LA County infrastructure really isn't built to handle large amounts of rain, mostly because it almost never rains there.
Also, pretty much all the heavily populated areas are in a basin that the Transverse Range/San Gabriel Mountains drain directly into.

That being said, this should be pretty interesting to watch. I'm sure the Good Lord has his reasons.
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