Los Angeles Times

Editorial: The drought is over now, right? (Spoiler alert: No)

Two women share an umbrella while walking along the Hermosa Beach Pier.

The storms keep coming, one after another after another, like a series of fire-hose blasts so relentless that meteorologists use terms like “atmospheric river,” “bomb cyclone” and “bombogenesis.” What happened to our formerly gentle old winter visitor, the “pineapple express”? Cities and highways have flooded in Northern California, and the Sierra Nevada snowpack measured at 174% of the historical average for this point in the year. And that was even before the current

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times6 min readAmerican Government
How Kevin McCarthy Is Influencing This Congressional Race — Without Being On The Ballot
VISALIA, Calif. — As he stood on a sun-dappled patio overlooking the Visalia Country Club, Tulare County Sheriff Mike Boudreaux didn't mince words about his chances in his run for Congress. "I am the underdog," Boudreaux told a crowd of supporters. "
Los Angeles Times5 min read
Mary McNamara: Being A ‘Doctor Who’ Fan Means Learning How To Love And Lose And Love Again
I’m four episodes into the reign of Ncuti Gatwa’s Fifteenth Doctor ... well, five if you count the “Doctor Who Special 4” in which he met his companion Ruby Sunday (Millie Gibson) ... well, five and a half if you also count the “Doctor Who Special 3”
Los Angeles Times6 min read
In Rural Calif., Serenity Threatened By Planned Battery Facilities, Costlier Fire Insurance
ACTON, Calif. -- On five acres in Acton, Christina Weyer and her husband care for rescued senior and special-needs equines. At the moment, six horses and 13 donkeys, along with a dog and a clutter of feral cats, share the property. In this dry, winds

Related Books & Audiobooks