4th UPDATE — New storm arrives tonight . . . and a bigger one Thursday . . . as power outages, rain, high winds rake North Olympic Peninsula

4th UPDATE —  New storm arrives tonight . . . and a bigger one Thursday . . . as power outages, rain, high winds rake North Olympic Peninsula

UPDATE — A second storm is on track to arrive late tonight (Tuesday night) and is expected to be a repeat of Monday’s storm, says Kirby Cook, a National Weather Service forecaster in Seattle.

A third storm expected to arrive Thursday morning may pack a much larger punch.

“The third storm is the strongest of them. This is the one we’re really watching,” Cook said.

There is uncertainty as to where the most severe portions of the third storm will make landfall, but it is expected to produce considerably stronger winds than the first two storms along the coast, he said.

The National Weather Service said the heaviest rain from the trio of storms will fall on the coast.

It could total 10 to 13 inches in the western slope of the Olympic Mountains and 5 to 9 inches in the North Cascades.

OUR ROUNDUP OF WEATHER TODAY:

THE FIRST OF three storms taking aim at the North Olympic Peninsula dropped record rainfall in LaPush and lifted the Bogachiel River to near flood stage, endangering a Corps of Engineers dredge parked in the small harbor at LaPush.

National Weather Service flood warnings have been issued for the Bogachiel and Elwha rivers through tonight, and a flood watch is in effect for all of Clallam and Jefferson counties through Friday.

Wind toppling trees caused broken wires and power outages across the North Olympic Peninsula, including 1,000 customers in Jefferson County.

A weather station in LaPush reported 2.3 inches of rain during a 24-hour period ending at 3 a.m. Tuesday.

That broke the Dec. 8 record of 2.28 inches set in 1971, said Clallam County Sheriff’s Sgt. Brian King, who supervises the West End detachment of the Sheriff’s Office.

“The rain is impressive, even for the West End,” King said.

By 4 p.m. Tuesday, the Bogachiel River near LaPush was 35.53 feet and falling from a 1 p.m. high of 36.32 feet. Flood stage is 37 feet, according to the U.S. Geological Survey streamflow-monitoring Web page.

Dredging barge

The swollen river raised worries about the dredging barge at the mouth of the Quillayute River.

“Our concern is that at low tide, the river will speed up. It’s our major priority right now,” said Chief William Lyon of the Quileute police.

A 1:35 p.m. Tuesday, a 8.53-foot tide was holding river waters back.

But as the ocean level fell toward a negative 0.8-foot tide expected at 8:24 p.m. Tuesday, the swollen river waters would speed up, putting additional stress on the lines, Lyon said.

Crew members were watching to see if the lines securing the dredge could take the force of flood waters at low tide, he said.

At about 1 p.m., the area also was experiencing winds of 30 to 40 mph, Lyon said, although he added that the storm seemed to be passing.

Forks-area outages

LaPush officials also were dealing with power outages as trees fell into power lines.

“There is a snapped power line right behind the police station,” Lyon said.

It was unknown when power would be restored, as a second major winter storm approached the coast and Clallam County Public Utility

District crews struggled with multiple power line failures in the county.

The PUD reported that about 500 customers on Quileute Prairie and in the LaPush area were without power Tuesday afternoon, with no estimate when it would be repaired.

“There are two broken poles [due to wind and fallen trees] to repair,” said Mike Howe, Clallam PUD spokesman.

Lyon said LaPush crews were kept busy removing downed trees on U.S. Highway 110, which threatened to cut off the small community.

“We still have quite a few trees falling,” he said.

The good news, he said, was that the jetties that protect the town from ocean waves were holding.

King said Tuesday that while rivers had not crested as high as predicted, there was standing water on many roads due to the heavy rainfall.

The official Weather Service station at Quillayute Airport reported 2.92 inches, but the rainfall amount was not a record.

The storm produced sustained winds of about 23 mph and gusts to 43 mph.

A Weather Service flood warning for the Elwha River at McDonald Bridge and for the Bogachiel River near LaPush is active until late tonight.

At 4 p.m. Tuesday, the Elwha River measured 19.10 feet, falling from a

2 p.m. height of 19.77 feet. Flood stage is 20 feet.

The Weather Service weather station at William R. Fairchild International Airport in Port Angeles received 1 inch of rain Monday, and an additional 0.35 inches fell by 1 p.m. Tuesday.

Jefferson County

Jefferson Healthcare in Port Townsend and neighborhoods nearby lost power for about an hour due to weather-related damage to power lines, said Jim Parker, district manager of the Jefferson County PUD.

About 1,000 customers were affected by power outages Tuesday, he said.

That included a number of small outages in the Quilcene area as trees fell on lines in outlying areas, Parker said.

Most had power restored by 4 p.m., he said.

The Clallam County PUD reported that 800 customers in the Neah Bay area lost power because of trees on the transmission lines.

Restoration in Neah Bay was expected at around 9 p.m. or later, Howe said.

He added that several smaller power outages Tuesday affected about 100 customers on East Beach and Barnes Point, 42 customers in the Hoko-Ozette area and 35 customers on the west side of Lake Sutherland.

State Department of Transportation crews were kept busy removing fallen trees from highways.

Highways were briefly opened and closed due to falling trees at Highway 101 near Mansfield Road and state Highway 112 near Freshwater Bay Road.

State Highway 20 near Woodman Road, west of Port Hadlock, was closed because of a fallen tree, and in west Jefferson County, Highway 101 was closed briefly near Nolan Creek due to power lines on the road.

________

Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5070, or at arice@peninsuladailynews.com.

FROM CLALLAM COUNTY PUD at 10:47 a.m.

The PUD is experiences weather related outages on the West End of the county:

Almost 800 customers out in Neah Bay due to tree through the transmission line.

– Estimated Time of Restoration (ETR): 4-6 hours

About 500 customers out along Quileute Prairie and in LaPush area. There are two broken poles (wind and trees) to repair

– No ETR

About 100 customers on East Beach & and Barnes Point:

– Several hours to restore.

About 42 customers on Hoko-Ozette Road (west of Clallam Bay):

– ETR 1-2 hours.

35 customers on the west side of Lake Sutherland:

– no ETR.

FROM THE CLALLAM County Sheriff’s Office at about 8:30 a.m. today:

Chief Bart at Forks PD advises that Forks is experiencing high winds and very heavy rain but they still have power. Report from Three Rivers of intermittent power outages.

Chief Lyons at LaPush PD reports that high winds have downed power lines and trees. Spruce St., Main St. and Quillayute Nation St. are all blocked by downed power lines. The Police Dept. is completely blocked in by downed power lines. High winds are continuing in the area. PUD enroute.

**WINTER STORM WARNING**

1ST STORM GETTING STRONGER THIS MORNING

POWERFUL 2ND STORM NEARS – LOTS OF RAIN, HIGH WIND AND POSSIBLE MINOR FLOODING

Storm #1

Has arrived and the National Weather Service has upgraded the alert to a HIGH WIND WARNING with SSE winds blowing at a sustained rate of 40-45 mph gusting to 70 mph . The warning is until noon Tuesday. Heavy rain will accompany the storm.

Storm #2 – Possibly stronger than Storm #1

A HIGH WIND WATCH has been issued for the second storm arriving Tuesday night into Wednesday, with heavy coastal rain (2”-3”) and powerful sustained winds, between 40-45 mph, gusting to 70mph.

Soils will be saturated during this event, increasing the likelihood of landslides, downed trees and power lines.

Storm # 3 – still developing, little data so far, but could be very potent.

Arrive mid-day Thursday into Friday with powerful winds (55-70 mph gusts) and heavy rain. The entire county may bear the brunt of this storm.

OUR PREVIOUS STORY:

SEATTLE — Forecasters say heavy rain will be blowing into Washington through Wednesday.

The National Weather Service said the heaviest rain will fall on the coast, Olympics and Cascades.

With the snow level above 7,000 feet, the rain will fill rivers, and flooding is possible.

Rain from the storm could total 10 to 13 inches on the Olympics and 5 to 9 inches in the North Cascades.

Forecasters said flooding could begin tonight and crest Wednesday or Thursday on the Bogachiel, Elwha, Satsop, Nooksack, Skagit and Stillaguamish rivers.

In Eastern Washington, rain and above-normal temperatures also are forecast through the week with snow only above about 7,000 feet in the mountains.

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