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President Biden Visits Storm-Hit California After Raising Federal Aid Even Higher

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An elderly white man exits Air Force One with presidential seal on the airplane and journalists and camera people waiting below, a soldier salutes.
Pres. Biden greets Gov. Gavin Newsom, Sen. Alex Padilla and other officials as he descends from Air Force One at Moffett Federal Airfield on Thursday, Jan. 19, 2023. Biden is in California to visit areas damaged by the recent winter storms in Santa Clara and Santa Cruz counties. (Kori Suzuki/KQED)

Update, 4 p.m. Thursday: President Joe Biden walked along the splintered boardwalk of the picture-postcard beach town of Capitola in Santa Cruz County on Thursday and heard from business owners struggling to repair damage to their shops after deadly storms caused devastation across the region and killed more than 20 people statewide.

Biden toured a gutted seafood restaurant and the badly flooded Paradise Beach Grille, not far from the collapsed Capitola Pier and the brightly painted pink, orange and teal shops that are all boarded up following the storms. Walls were crumbling, with debris scattered everywhere and floors swept away by raging waters.

Paradise Beach Grille owner Chuck Maier told Biden that water had gushed up from the floor and swamped his business on Monterey Bay. “No kidding," Biden exclaimed.

“You don’t feel it until you walk the streets,” Biden said later from nearby Seacliff State Beach, speaking about how bad the damage was and blaming climate change for the severity of the weather. “If anybody doubts the climate is changing, they must have been asleep for the last couple of years.”

Flanked by first responders, Gov. Gavin Newsom and Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Deanne Criswell, the president highlighted the damage from the punishing rains, powerful winds, floods and landslides. He warned that climate change would create more extreme weather.

“We know some of the destruction is going to take years to rebuild,” Biden said. “But we've got to not just rebuild, but rebuild better."

Newsom praised the fast federal response, but warned the threat remains high in a state that just a few years ago suffered devastating drought and is now facing record rainfall.

"The scale and scope of these floods is hard to understand unless you get out, and that's why I couldn't be more grateful to the president for taking the time to come out again."

Original story, 2:50 p.m. Thursday: President Joe Biden is touring damaged areas and being briefed on recovery efforts Thursday after devastating storms hit California in recent weeks, killing at least 20 people and causing destruction across 41 of the state's 58 counties.

The president, accompanied by Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Deanne Criswell, Gov. Gavin Newsom and other state and local officials, is visiting the storm-damaged Capitola Pier in Santa Cruz County, where he is meeting with business owners and affected residents.

Biden will also meet with first responders and deliver remarks on supporting the state's recovery at nearby Seacliff State Beach. More than 500 FEMA and other federal personnel have been deployed to California to support the emergency response operations.

Criswell said Thursday on the trip from Washington to California that the president and staff have to be mindful of what people have been through when traveling to places devastated by storms and other natural disasters.

“There has just been so much trauma to this community and it’s really important that we keep that in mind. ... These communities have had loss of life, loss of their well-being and their livelihood, and I think it’s incredibly important that they know that the president is here to support them and that the full force of the federal family is going to be behind them."

Biden has already approved a major disaster declaration for the state, freeing up additional federal resources for recovery efforts. Hours before the visit, he raised the level of federal assistance available even higher.

Four men are seen walking across an airfield.
Pres. Biden and Gov. Gavin Newsom talk as they walk across the airfield. (Kori Suzuki/KQED)

From Dec. 26 to Jan. 17, the entire state of California averaged 11.47 inches of rain and snow, according to the National Weather Service’s Weather Prediction Center, with some reports of up to 15 feet of snow falling over the three-week period in the highest elevations of the Sierra Nevada.

California gets much of its rain and snow in the winter from a weather phenomenon known as “atmospheric rivers”: long, narrow bands of water vapor that form over the ocean and flow through the sky.

California has been hit by nine atmospheric river storms since late December. The storms have relented in recent days, although forecasters were calling for light rain toward the end of this week followed by a dry period.

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