Another "sudden rain outburst" incident, this one in San Diego where "residual heat from a record-breaking wave created the perfect storm." The Heating Planet series continues at City of Angels Blog Video / Transcript
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Tuesday, August 26, 2025
"Today! Giant Floods Swept Away Many Vehicles, Homes, in SoCal"
TRANSCRIPT
k at the car.
0:11
On Monday, August 25th, 2025, Southern
0:15
California was gripped by a sudden and
0:17
violent meteorological event that
0:19
transformed sunbaked highways into
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rivers and tranquil desert towns into
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disaster zones.
0:27
A convergence of monsunal moisture,
0:29
unstable atmospheric conditions, and
0:32
residual heat from a record-breaking
0:34
wave created the perfect storm.
0:36
Literally,
0:39
by midafternoon, the National Weather
0:41
Service, NWS, had issued flash flood
0:44
warnings across Riverside, San
0:46
Bernardino, San Diego, and Imperial
0:50
counties, urging residents to seek
0:52
higher ground and avoid travel. The
0:54
warnings were not merely precautionary.
0:57
They were prophetic.
0:59
[Music]
1:00
The flash floods were triggered by a
1:02
monsunal surge sweeping northward from
1:04
Baja California, colliding with a
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lingering heat dome that had kept
1:08
temperatures in the triple digits for
1:10
days.
1:12
Doppler radar detected thunderstorm
1:14
cells intensifying rapidly over the
1:16
Coachella Valley and eastern San Diego
1:19
County, dumping 1 to 2 in of rain per
1:22
hour. a staggering rate for the arid
1:24
region.
1:27
Wind gusts reached 50 mph and hail the
1:31
size of quarters pelted communities like
1:33
Palm Springs, Cathedral City, and Berego
1:35
Springs.
1:37
[Music]
1:38
The saturated ground already stressed by
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urban development and poor drainage
1:43
infrastructure gave way to torrents of
1:45
runoff that overwhelmed creeks, storm
1:48
drains, and highways.
1:52
NWS issues a flash flood warning for
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Riverside County. Rainfall rates exceed
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1 in per hour. Automated gauges confirm
2:01
flooding in Palm Desert and Rancho
2:03
Mirage. Emergency alerts are sent to
2:06
mobile devices.
2:10
Severe thunderstorm warnings expand to
2:12
San Diego and Imperial counties. Hail
2:15
and wind damage reported. Highway 86
2:18
near the salt and sea becomes
2:20
impassible. Multiple vehicles stranded
2:23
in rising waters.
2:26
Mudslides reported near MT San Jasinto
2:30
State Park. Evacuation orders issued for
2:33
hillside communities. Flash flood
2:35
warnings remain active. Emergency
2:38
shelters open in El Centro and India.
2:41
Highway 86. One of the most dramatic
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scenes unfolded near Desert Elmore
2:46
Ranch, where Highway 86 was swallowed by
2:49
floodwaters, stranding dozens of
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vehicles.
2:53
Big drop over here.
2:54
Video footage captured by local
2:56
residents showed cars bobbing like
2:58
buoys, their headlights flickering
3:00
beneath muddy currents.
3:04
Emergency crews waited through chest
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deep water to rescue trapped motorists,
3:08
some of whom had climbed onto their
3:10
roofs to escape the rising tide.
3:14
"It was like watching the desert turn
3:16
into an ocean," said Maria Gonzalez, a
3:19
nurse from Broly who was rescued after 3
3:22
hours.
3:24
In Palm Springs, flash floods inundated
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low-lying neighborhoods, damaging homes,
3:31
businesses, and public infrastructure.
3:33
Power outages affected over 12,000
3:35
residents. And emergency dispatch
3:38
centers were overwhelmed with calls
3:39
reporting collapsed roofs, flooded
3:42
basement, and stranded elderly
3:44
residents.
3:47
In Berago Springs, the local hospital
3:49
activated its emergency protocol as
3:52
access roads became impassible.
3:54
Helicopters were dispatched to airlift
3:56
critical patients to facilities in San
3:58
Diego.
4:02
Schools across affected counties
4:03
announced closures for August 26th,
4:06
citing unsafe conditions and damage to
4:09
facilities. "We've never seen anything
4:11
like this," said Superintendent Carling
4:14
of the Imperial Unified School District.
4:16
Entire classrooms were underwater.
4:21
California's Office of Emergency
4:23
Services, Cal Ooes, activated its level
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two emergency operation center,
4:29
coordinating with FEMA, local fire
4:31
departments, and the National Guard.
4:36
Over 300 personnel were deployed to
4:38
assist with evacuations,
4:40
shelter management, and infrastructure
4:43
assessment.
4:44
Governor
4:46
Elena Martinez issued a state of
4:48
emergency unlocking federal disaster
4:50
relief funds and authorizing the use of
4:53
state resources for recovery. This is a
4:56
moment for resilience, she said in a
4:58
televised address. We will rebuild, but
5:01
first we must protect lives.
5:05
Thanks to advancements in automated rain
5:07
gauges and radar-based forecasting, the
5:10
NWS was able to issue timely warnings
5:12
that likely saved lives. Mobile alerts
5:15
reached millions and social media
5:17
platforms became hubs for real-time
5:19
updates, rescue coordination, and
5:22
community support.
5:25
AI powered flood modeling helped
5:27
emergency planners predict which
5:29
neighborhoods were most vulnerable,
5:31
allowing for targeted evacuations. We're
5:33
seeing the future of disaster response
5:35
unfold, said Dr. Raj Patel, a climate
5:39
resilience expert at UC Riverside.
5:43
Experts warned that the August 25th
5:46
floods are not an anomaly, but a symptom
5:48
of a changing climate. Warmer air holds
5:51
more moisture, increasing the intensity
5:53
of rainfall events. Combined with urban
5:56
sprawl and aging infrastructure, the
5:58
risk of flash floods is rising.
6:03
In the first half of 2025 alone, over
6:06
2,400 flash flood warnings were issued
6:09
nationwide, with California among the
6:12
top four states affected. "We're
6:14
entering an era where deserts flood and
6:16
coastlines burn," said Dr. Emily Chan, a
6:19
meteorologist with Noah.
6:22
A severe thunderstorm moved through
6:24
eastern San Diego County Monday
6:26
afternoon, prompting the National
6:28
Weather Service to issue a flash flood
6:30
warning for parts of the mountains and
6:32
deserts.
6:35
A similar weather pattern was expected
6:37
for Tuesday and Wednesday as monsunal
6:39
moisture gripped the region. With it
6:41
came the possibility of heavy rainfall,
6:44
at times at a rate of more than 1 in per
6:46
hour, to the mountains and deserts in
6:48
the afternoons.
6:51
Some mountain areas could even see rates
6:54
push 2 in an hour.
6:56
The National Weather Service said
7:00
on Monday, the NWS began issuing alerts
7:03
for extreme weather as a thunderstorm
7:05
moved southeast.
7:09
A severe thunderstorm warning was issued
7:11
for east central San Diego County until
7:14
300 p.m. The NWS said the storm was
7:16
bringing 70 mph winds and nickelsiz
7:19
hail, adding that damage was likely to
7:22
occur to roofs, outbuildings, and trees.
7:27
Torrential rainfall is occurring with
7:29
this storm and may lead to flash
7:31
flooding, the NWS said.
7:34
Water everywhere, bro. The NWS also
7:37
issued a flash flood warning until 5:00
7:39
p.m. for southeastern San Diego County
7:42
where anywhere between a half in and
7:44
1.25 in of rain had already fallen.
7:49
Under the warning were I8 between Pine
7:52
Valley and Boulevard, Alpine, Mount
7:55
Lagona, Lake Morina, Pine Valley, Campo,
7:59
Petero, Highway S1 between Lake Cayamaka
8:03
and Mount Lagona, Barrett Lake, and
8:05
Dulura. According to the NWS,
8:10
a flash flood warning means
8:11
life-threatening flash flooding of
8:13
creeks, streams, urban areas, highways,
8:17
and streets are possible. The NWS warned
8:20
drivers to always turn around when
8:22
encountering flooded roads. The agency
8:24
warned most food deaths occur in
8:26
vehicles.
8:29
In hilly terrain, there are hundreds of
8:31
low water crossings which are
8:33
potentially dangerous in heavy rain. Do
8:35
not attempt to cross flooded roads. Find
8:38
an alternate route. The NWS said
8:43
the bulk of the storm was expected to
8:45
clear by 6:00 p.m., but a similar
8:47
weather pattern was expected for Tuesday
8:49
and Wednesday afternoons.
8:53
Most of the activity should stay over
8:55
the mountains and deserts again with
8:57
only about a 20% chance of any showers
9:00
drifting west of the mountains. NBC 7
9:02
meteorologist Greg Bledo said
9:06
a flood advisory and a flood watch were
9:09
also in effect.
9:12
The rest of the county will continue to
9:14
experience hot and humid temperatures to
9:17
begin the week. Bleo said by the end of
9:20
the week, San Diego's weather should
9:22
return to more seasonal conditions.
9:40
The first And that thing got four.

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