Late-winter storms slow California’s dive back into drought
PHILLIPS STATION, Calif. — A stormy close to California’s rainy season has slowed the state’s plunge back into drought, bringing the vital Sierra Nevada snowpack to just over half of average, water officials said Monday.
The welcome run of rain- and snowstorms last month more than doubled the state’s snow totals for the year, hiking it to 52 per cent of normal.
Runoff from snow historically supplies a third of California’s water, and the April snow survey done Monday typically is the most important for gauging how much — or how little — water California’s cities, farms and wildlife can expect after the winter.
“A good March, but certainly not a great March,” state snow-survey chief Frank Gehrke told news crews who followed him to the snow-covered Phillips Station for the survey.