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Thursday, July 10, 2025

‘Bomb cyclone’ kills 1, knocks out power in homes across northwest US

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232 days ago
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A person records damage of a tree and downed power lines during a major storm Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2024 in Seattle. (Jennifer Buchanan/The Seattle Times via AP)

A person records damage of a tree and downed power lines during a major storm Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2024 in Seattle. (Jennifer Buchanan/The Seattle Times via AP)

Jennifer Buchanan

A ma­jor storm swept across the north­west U.S., bat­ter­ing the re­gion with strong winds and rain, caus­ing wide­spread pow­er out­ages and down­ing trees that killed at least one per­son.

The Weath­er Pre­dic­tion Cen­ter is­sued ex­ces­sive rain­fall risks through Fri­day and hur­ri­cane-force wind warn­ings were in ef­fect as the strongest at­mos­pher­ic riv­er — a large plume of mois­ture — that Cal­i­for­nia and the Pa­cif­ic North­west has seen this sea­son over­whelmed the re­gion. The storm sys­tem that hit start­ing Tues­day is con­sid­ered a “ bomb cy­clone,” which oc­curs when a cy­clone in­ten­si­fies rapid­ly.

Falling trees struck homes and lit­tered roads across north­west Wash­ing­ton. In Lyn­nwood, Wash­ing­ton, a woman died Tues­day night when a large tree fell on a home­less en­camp­ment, South Coun­ty Fire said in a state­ment on X. In Seat­tle, a tree fell on­to a ve­hi­cle, tem­porar­i­ly trap­ping a per­son in­side, the Seat­tle Fire De­part­ment re­port­ed. The agency lat­er said the in­di­vid­ual was in sta­ble con­di­tion.

“Trees are com­ing down all over the city & falling on­to homes,” the fire de­part­ment in Belle­vue, about 10 miles (16 kilo­me­tres) east of Seat­tle, post­ed on the so­cial plat­form X. “If you can, go to the low­est floor and stay away from win­dows. Do not go out­side if you can avoid it.”

Ear­ly Wednes­day, over 600,000 hous­es in Wash­ing­ton State were re­port­ed to be with­out pow­er on power­outage.us. But the num­ber of out­age re­ports had fluc­tu­at­ed wild­ly Tues­day evening like­ly due in part to sev­er­al weath­er and util­i­ty agen­cies strug­gling to re­port in­for­ma­tion on the storm be­cause of in­ter­net out­ages and oth­er tech­ni­cal prob­lems. It wasn’t clear if that fig­ure was ac­cu­rate. More than 15,000 had lost pow­er in Ore­gon and near­ly 19,000 in Cal­i­for­nia.

As of 8 p.m., the peak wind speed was in Cana­di­an wa­ters, where gusts of 101 mph (163 kph) were re­port­ed off the coast of Van­cou­ver Is­land, ac­cord­ing to the Na­tion­al Weath­er Ser­vice in Seat­tle. Along the Ore­gon coast, there were wind gusts as high at 79 mph (127 kph) Tues­day evening, ac­cord­ing to the Na­tion­al Weath­er Ser­vice in Med­ford, Ore­gon, while wind speed of 77 mph (124 kph) was record­ed at Mount Rainier in Wash­ing­ton.

The Na­tion­al Weath­er Ser­vice warned peo­ple on the West Coast about the dan­ger of trees dur­ing high winds, post­ing on X, “Stay safe by avoid­ing ex­te­ri­or rooms and win­dows and by us­ing cau­tion when dri­ving.”

In north­ern Cal­i­for­nia, flood and high wind watch­es were in ef­fect, with up to 8 inch­es (20 cen­time­tres) of rain pre­dict­ed for parts of the San Fran­cis­co Bay Area, North Coast and Sacra­men­to Val­ley. Dan­ger­ous flash flood­ing, rock slides and de­bris flows were ex­pect­ed, ac­cord­ing to the Na­tion­al Weath­er Ser­vice Weath­er Pre­dic­tion Cen­ter.

A win­ter storm watch was is­sued for the north­ern Sier­ra Neva­da above 3,500 feet (1,066 me­tres), where 15 inch­es (28 cen­time­tres) of snow was pos­si­ble over two days. Wind gusts could top 75 mph (120 kph) in moun­tain ar­eas, fore­cast­ers said.

The Na­tion­al Weath­er Ser­vice is­sued a flood watch for parts of south­west­ern Ore­gon through Fri­day evening, while rough winds and seas halt­ed a fer­ry route in north­west­ern Wash­ing­ton be­tween Port Townsend and Coupeville.

A bliz­zard warn­ing was is­sued for the ma­jor­i­ty of the Cas­cades in Wash­ing­ton, in­clud­ing Mount Rainier Na­tion­al Park, start­ing Tues­day af­ter­noon, with up to a foot of snow and wind gusts up to 60 mph (97 kph), ac­cord­ing to the weath­er ser­vice in Seat­tle. Trav­el across pass­es could be dif­fi­cult if not im­pos­si­ble.

SEAT­TLE (AP) —

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