February 11, 2009 6:53 PM

Calif. Storm Damage Tops $100M

(CBS/AP)  Homeowners shoveled away mud and other debris and authorities worked to repair damaged levees Monday after a pair of storms flooded Northern California's wine country.

The rain let up over the hard-hit region and moved into Central and Southern California, drenching the Rose Parade in Pasadena for the first time since 1955 and threatening mudslides on hills stripped bare by last summer's wildfires.

Initial estimates put the damage throughout Northern California at more than $100 million. The storms were blamed for two deaths, both of them victims of falling trees.

The Russian River at Guerneville began receding after cresting at 41 feet — 9 feet above flood stage — but officials said it would probably not return to its banks until Tuesday morning.

"When it goes down below its banks, that's when the real cleanup begins," Sonoma County spokesman Dan Levin said.

The rising waters there forced many to evacuate in the first hours of the New Year, reports CBS News correspondent Vince Gonzales. Hundreds of homes were flooded in the scenic community, he said. Live power lines were down throughout the area, and residents were warned to stay away.

And Southern California is expecting four more inches of rain in the valleys, and up to eight in the mountain areas. There's also the potential for water spouts and small tornadoes, CBS News correspondent Sandra Hughes reports.

The Marin County town of San Anselmo, north of San Francisco, sustained an estimated $40 million in damage when a creek inundated downtown under 4 feet of water and left a coating of mud on streets. Around 50 businesses were damaged. About two miles west in Fairfax, three homes were nearly wiped out by mudslides.

Some small towns in Northern California were hit the hardest — Collinsville, for example, was evacuated after a levee was breached in the Sacramento River delta, Hughes reports.

One man told CBS News he evacuated so quickly he left his heart medication.

The levee system itself, built in the late 1800s, has many worried. University of California-Berkeley Professor Robert Bea told Hughes "it's marginal at best."

If the levees failed completely not only would people and property be in danger but the system that delivers fresh water to much of the state could be contaminated.



Water also receded in the heart of wine country along the Napa River, which rose out of its banks at the town of Napa and inundated several downtown blocks. Napa officials said some 600 homes and 150 businesses were flooded, and damage was estimated at $50 million.



© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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