Snow and ice in whiteout conditions contributed to a pileup of more than 100 cars on a major highway connecting Oregon and Idaho, reportedly injuring several people, as a winter storm descended on the Pacific Northwest Thursday.
President Trump's not the first to propose sending Pacific Northwest water to California, but there are technical reasons why it has never happened.
The state is sandwiched between the Pacific Northwest which is expected to be cooler than normal and the Southwest which is expected to be warmer than normal.
Snow and ice in whiteout conditions contributed to a pileup of as many as 30 cars on a major highway connecting Oregon and Idaho, reportedly injuring several people, as a winter storm descended on the Pacific Northwest.
Snow and ice in whiteout conditions contributed to as many as 30 cars involved in a pileup on a major highway connecting Oregon and Idaho, reportedly injuring several people, as a winter storm descended on the Pacific Northwest Thursday.
Snow and ice in whiteout conditions contributed to a pileup of more than 100 cars on a major highway connecting Oregon and Idaho, reportedly injuring several people, as a winter storm descended on the Pacific Northwest Thursday.
President Donald Trump has not and cannot take water from the Pacific Northwest and send it somewhere else, such as California. There are quite a few reasons why that's just not possible, but before we get into those,
Warm air from Arizona, California, and Nevada has settled over the Pacific Northwest and will help push high temperatures into the mid and upper 60s. “We haven’t seen 65 degrees, 66 degrees since last October,” Storm Tracker 2 Meteorologist Rhonda Shelby said. “We have a real shot at it later today.”
A pair of storms pummeling the Pacific Northwest threaten flooding, avalanches and 'sting jets' – intense and destructive low-level winds.
President Trump's not the first to propose sending Pacific Northwest water to California, but there are technical reasons why it has never happened.
A series of storm systems fueled by an atmospheric river brought flash flooding to the Pacific Northwest this weekend -- and more rain is on the way.
Residents of a Southern California mountain community near the Eaton Fire burn scar are digging out of roads submerged in sludge after the strongest storm of the year swept through the area, unleashing debris flows.