Levee fails in Washington
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Pacific Northwest, Washington Rain
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A map from the National Weather Service in Portland shows where the most rain is likely to fall. In Oregon, the central Willamette Valley and the coast have the greatest chance of two inches of rain or more between Thursday and Friday. Corvallis and Coos Bay have a 90% and 94% chance, respectively, of hitting two or more inches in about 24 hours.
After record flooding in Washington state, then a widespread western windstorm, more atmospheric rivers are targeting different parts of the West. Here's the latest forecast.
7don MSN
Washington state under emergency as torrential rain triggers floods, mudslides and evacuations
Heavy rain continued to fall over parts of the state Thursday morning, prompting road closures, water rescues and suspension of Amtrak trains between Seattle and Vancouver.
A flood warning was released by the National Weather Service on Thursday at 4:05 p.m. valid from Friday 8 a.m. until Saturday 8:30 a.m. for Washington County.
Multiple rivers are expected to flood in Oregon and Washington, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Most of the region is under Flood Warning or Watch.
Hundreds of families across Washington state have had to leave their homes because of catastrophic river flooding. Many have found a warm place to sleep at emergency, congregate shelters.
Approximately 260,987 customers are without power on Wednesday, Dec. 17, at 8 a.m. ET, according to USA TODAY's power outage tracker. Oregon, Washington's southern neighbor, is also grappling with power outages.
A 33-year-old man died in Snohomish County on Tuesday. Gov. Bob Ferguson said it was a minor miracle there haven’t been more deaths.
A building in Aberdeen has partially collapsed, and trees are falling on homes and powerlines across western Washington. Here is a live blog of wind storm impacts.
FOX 5 DC on MSN
DC weather: Rain, gusty winds move in Thursday evening
The Washington, D.C., region began with a chilly start Thursday as rain and gusty winds are expected to move into the area later this evening.
The US Geological Survey and the State Department of Natural Resources are both concerned about the risk of widespread landslides in the coming days.