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January 05, 2023

Wild storm....

SF Bay Area storm turns deadly as winds up to 101 mph topple numerous trees

Amy Graff

Amid Wednesday night's bomb cyclone event, powerful winds blasted the San Francisco Bay Area, knocking over trees that blocked roads, fell onto houses and cars, and killed one person. Emergency management departments across the region said they were responding to an unusual number of fallen trees. In the Sonoma County town of Occidental, a tree fell onto a home, killing an infant, the Press Democrat reported. 

"There are numerous downed trees and power outages," said Roger Gass, a forecaster with the weather service. "We’re trying to keep up with all the reports, and we can’t keep up."

The weather service said wind gusts over 90 mph were possible Wednesday evening, and this evening Marin County saw winds top this speed. A remarkable 101 mph wind gust was recorded at PG&E's Nicasio Hills weather gauge in Marin County at 5:10 p.m. Gass said that he could not confirm the accuracy of the reading as it was not measured at an official weather service site, but he said, "It's within the realm of possibility."

NBC Bay Area meteorologist Rob Mayeda reported on several other top wind speeds, including a 90 mph gust at Big Rock Ridge in Marin County, a 78 mph wind at Soda Springs Road in the Santa Cruz Mountains, a 74 mph gust on Mount Diablo, and a 59 mph wind at Oakland Airport. 

The North Bay has seen some of the most severe weather with this system and trees toppled across the region. "We’ve being getting a lot of calls about downed trees and power lines,"  Karen Hancock, community services officer with Sonoma County Community, told KCBS Radio. "It’s nonstop." 

The Occidental Volunteer Fire Department said it responded to a UPS driver who was trapped between two downed trees, the Press Democrat reported.

As the winds picked up, social media was flooded with images of trees blocking roads. 

ABC 7 reported that a 50-foot-tall tree fell onto a house in Corte Madera. The West Marin Feed tweeted just before 6 p.m. that trees were down on Ottingers Hill on Sir Francis Drake going into Point Reyes, trapping cars on the road. KWMR Radio reported that Sir Francis Drake was closed in Inverness as of 6:15 p.m.

Trees and limbs fell onto roads across San Francisco, impacting roadways and bus routes.

"Dozens of downed trees causing Muni reroutes," Jeffrey Tumlin, director of transportation for the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency, wrote on Twitter at 6:07 p.m. "Crews out everywhere removing debris, directing traffic and arranging bus shuttles."

The San Francisco Public Library asked people to avoid all sidewalks on Hyde and Larkin streets near the Main Library in the Civic Center neighborhood due to "falling trees" in a tweet posted at 7:33 p.m.

The San Francisco Public Works Department said at 8:17 p.m. that crews were clearing a downed black acacia tree blocking westbound Market Street. "Their night is far from over," the department wrote on Twitter. 

KPIX reporter Max Darrow shared images on Twitter of massive trees down and blocking roads in Half Moon Bay.

The main rain band associated with the storm system had passed over the Bay Area by 8 p.m. Wednesday, but Gass said people should not let their guard down. The weather service said dangerous wind gusts and fallen trees will continue to be a concern through Thursday morning and into the weekend, when more storms are expected to impact the region. A wind warning is in effect through 10 a.m. Thursday.

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