California
Photos document Lake Oroville’s rise after storms hit California
Houseboats on Lake Oroville throughout a drought in Oroville, California, U.S., on Monday, Oct. 11, 2021.
David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Pictures
Lake Oroville, California’s second-largest reservoir, has skilled a dramatic rise in water ranges after a collection of atmospheric river storms in January triggered widespread flooding whereas boosting the Sierra Nevada snowpack and the state’s drought-stricken reservoirs.
The lake, which has a number of reservoirs and canals that provide water to 27 million residents, has reached 68% of its whole capability, up 28% from a pair months in the past, in response to knowledge from the California Division of Water Assets.
The enhance in water provide comes after Oroville had plummeted to such dire ranges that state officers in 2021 responded by shutting down the lake’s hydroelectric energy plant for the primary time for the reason that plant went into operation in 1967.
Earlier record-low water ranges at Oroville had been triggered by drought circumstances exacerbated by local weather change. Whereas California constantly experiences drought, local weather change has fueled particularly excessive temperatures and dry soil which have considerably diminished water runoff into the reservoirs.
Photographs taken in 2021 and 2023 present how rather more full Oroville is following the January storms:
Consumption gates on the Hyatt Energy Plant
The highest picture, taken on July 22, 2021, is an aerial view shot that reveals seen consumption gates on the Edward Hyatt Energy Plant consumption facility at Lake Oroville. The underside picture was taken on Feb. 14, 2023 after torrential rain prompted the lake to fill with water.
Justin Sullivan | Getty Pictures
Enterprise Bridge crosses over the lake
The highest picture, taken on July 22, 2021, reveals the Enterprise Bridge crossing over a piece of the lake that was beforehand underwater. The underside picture, taken Feb. 14, 2023, reveals how a lot storms have since stuffed the lake.
Justin Sullivan | Getty Pictures
Dry banks rise above Oroville
The highest picture was taken on July 22, 2021. The underside picture was taken on Feb. 14, 2023.
Justin Sullivan | Getty Pictures
Houseboats dwarfed by Oroville’s banks
The highest picture, taken April 27, 2021, reveals houseboats which are dwarfed by the steep banks of Lake Oroville. The underside picture was taken on Feb. 14, 2023.
Justin Sullivan | Getty Pictures
The highest picture was taken on April 27, 2021. The underside picture was taken on Feb. 14, 2023.
Justin Sullivan | Getty Pictures
California
Mike Johnson proposes conditional wildfire aid for California, Los Angeles
House Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana on Sunday reiterated his belief that Congress should consider attaching conditions to aid for California following the wildfire disaster that destroyed many homes and parts of Los Angeles.
Newsweek reached out to the House Speaker’s office and Trump transition team by email on Sunday for comment.
The Context
California fire authorities over the past 10 days have worked to successfully contain all but the two largest wildfires – the Palisades fire and the Eaton fire, which as of Sunday afternoon local time stood at 52 percent and 81 percent contained, respectively. The fires spread rapidly due to unexpected Santa Ana winds blew the initial flames over land that had been in a drought since March 2024.
Each of those fires now rank among the most destructive fires, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection: The Eaton fire, which has burned up 14,117 acres, has destroyed around 9,300 structures, making it the second-most destructive fire in state history; the Palisades fire, which has burned up 23,713 acres, has destroyed just over 4,300 structures, making it the fourth-most destructive fire.
However, Republicans have heavily criticized California Governor Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass for their response to the wildfires, blaming a number of factors that they attributed to Newsom’s policies, including an allegedly drained water reservoir and budget cuts to the fire department.
California authorities have ordered investigations into the various conditions that led to and exacerbated the wildfires.
What To Know
On Sunday, Johnson made an appearance on NBC’s Meet the Press, during which host Kristen Welker addressed comments he made last week where he suggested that any relief or aid to help recover and rebuild in the aftermath of the fire be given only on condition of addressing policy concerns.
When asked if he would commit to disaster relief for California without “strings attached,” Johnson said: “No, I won’t commit that, because we have a serious problem in California.”
“Listen, there are natural disasters,” Johnson said. “I’m from Louisiana. We’re prone to that. We understand how these things work, but then there’s also human error, and when the state and local officials make foolish policy decisions that make the disaster exponentially worse, we need to factor that in, and I think that’s a commonsense notion.”
“Listen, in California over the last couple years, they cut $100 million from forestry management,” Johnson said. “They cut, I think, almost $18 million from L.A.’s Fire Department, putting them into their other crazy priorities, and he had 117-million-gallon reservoir that was left empty for a year outside Pacific Palisades.”
“Those were decisions they made based on whatever their ideas were, but it made it worse, and everyone knew it would, and the risk was there,” he added.
When asked if he would consider linking relief to a measure requiring an increase in the national debt limit, Johnson said, “That’s one of the things we’re talking about every morning.”
What People Are Saying
When asked for comment, California Governor Gavin Newsom‘s office directed Newsweek to comments made during an interview with MSNBC political analyst Jen Psaki: “If that’s leadership, I have a different definition. I imagine it would be universally felt here. I’m not meeting Democrats, I’m not meeting Republicans, I’m not meeting Californians: I’m meeting American citizens desperate in need, and what they need is empathy, care, compassion, understanding.”
“They need support, not rhetoric, not strings attached,” Newsom said. “I met families who lost not only their home, but their business, their church, their sense of self, place, community,” adding, “That’s the face of leadership in the United States of America? Conditioning aid to the American people in need? Politicizing this tragic moment? So, I’ll spare any more commentary on it.”
DNC Rapid Response Director Alex Floyd in a statement: “Mike Johnson is following Donald Trump’s lead to put tax handouts for billionaires ahead of desperately needed disaster relief for Californians. Americans recovering from a disaster shouldn’t be a bargaining chip for Trump and Johnson’s reckless policies. But instead of working to provide help and lower costs for working families, Trump and Johnson are already telling us they’ll only focus on themselves and their billionaire backers over what’s best for the American people.”
Senator John Barrasso of Wyoming told FOX Business host Larry Kudlow: “It is heartbreaking what we’re seeing happening right now in California, and we have our Wyoming national guard helping out there … but there’s going to help from the federal government, you’re absolutely right: There has to be accountability for that money. It cannot be a blank check.”
“What we’ve seen, and even the fire chief of LA County has said that they were let down by the mayor, the elected officials – I mean, gross negligence at the state and local level where the fire department had $17 million taken away from their budget, and they were already stretched too thin, and they used the money for social programs,” Barrasso said.
What Happens Next
California continues to fight the fires and will focus on completely containing the two remaining major wildfires while extinguishing the other fires they managed to control over the past 10 days.
California
USC Trojans’ Lincoln Riley Visits California Recruits: Ryder Lyons, Brandon Arrington
The next Early National Signing Period is still 11 months away, but the USC Trojans have been off to a fast start and are showing no signs of slowing down. Lincoln Riley and the Trojans coaching staff had a busy week on the recruiting trail venturing around California as they look to add to its No. 2 recruiting class in 2026 cycle, per the On3 Industry Rankings.
USC started off the week by extending an offer to Mission Viejo (CA) four-star receiver and Georgia commit Vance Spafford. The talented local product is the No. 13 receiver and No. 76 overall prospect in the On3 Industry Rankings. The Trojans are late to the mix but will still have rest of the year to try and convince Spafford to play his college ball closer to home.
Riley and USC running backs coach Anthony Jones stopped by Oaks Christian (CA) on Thursday to visit 2026 four-star running back Deshonne Redeaux. Oaks Christian is also the home of four-star cornerback Davon Benjamin. Riley was in attendance back in November to watch the two blue-chip recruits compete in the first round of the Division 2 CIF Southern Section playoffs.
Redeaux is the No. 10 running back and No. 106 overall prospect and he is the No. 3 cornerback and No. 40 overall prospect in the 2026 On3 Industry Rankings. USC has been predicted to land both of the local products, but the Trojans staff will continue pulling out all of the stops.
While Riley and Jones were in Westlake Village, several members of the Trojans staff were in Orange County to stop by two of the premier high schools in the country, Mater Dei and St. John Bosco. Both schools are flooded with division one talent on a yearly basis. The only commit the Trojans currently have from either school is Bosco’s 2026 three-star athlete Joshua Holland.
Riley made the trip to Northern California to visit Folsom (CA) five-star quarterback Ryder Lyons on Friday. The highly coveted recruit is the brother of USC freshman tight end Walker Lyons.
The younger Lyons is the and No. 3 quarterback and No. 10 overall prospect in the On3 Industry Rankings. USC has long been considered the favorite to land Lyons, but BYU, Oregon and Ole Miss remain in the mix.
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“USC is high on my list,” Lyons told On3 in September. “There is a lot to like about USC. You have coach Riley. He has coached great quarterbacks that have won the Heisman Trophy and been drafted No. 1 in the NFL Draft. He is a great offensive mind and the defense is now playing at a different level.”
Riley also made a stop at Grant high school, one of the top programs in Northern California. USC defensive backs coach Doug Belk visited Loyola (CA) four-star cornerback commit Brandon Lockhart on Friday. He is one of two cornerbacks committed to the Trojans in the 2026 cycle, including Rancho Cucamonga (CA) four-star RJ Sermons.
Last week, Riley and D’Anton Lynn made the trip down to San Diego County to visit Mount Miguel (CA) five-star athlete Brandon Arrington. The highly coveted two-sport star is being heavily pursued by Texas A&M and Oregon, but Riley is determined to what it takes to keep Arrington in Southern California.
For years the Trojans have struggled to sign elite in-state talent but in the 2026 cycle, USC has made it a priority. With recruiting ramping up in the winter and spring months, Riley and his staff are pulling out all the stops to remain hot on the trail.
“We always wanna make it priority No. 1 to recruit Southern California,” Riley said in October. “But we gotta do a great job evaluating the guys and getting the guys that fit SC. I do think in the 2026 class, there’s a number of guys right now that really fit. And I think too, we’re seeing results now that our new defensive staff’s had some time to start building relationships with these guys locally in the ‘26 class. I think that’s been very positive as well.”
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California
Responsibility crisis: How California leadership failed families with LA fires
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The tragedies of Los Angeles’ recent fires are suffocating and impossible to wrap my mind around as a born-and-raised California mom who evacuated our forever home at 4 a.m. on Jan. 8.
I’m heartbroken. I’m livid. I’m praying. I’m guilty of emerging unscathed (so far). I’m vigilantly searching for answers while preparing for the next round of “Particularly Dangerous Event” winds. My own kids are asking me terrifying questions, and I’m answering with a faked “everything will be OK for everyone” confidence that only parents know how to do.
How did California leadership fail families so egregiously? They traded the time-tested value of responsibility for empty trends of “diversity, equity and inclusion.”
I don’t believe in politicizing tragedies – especially of this magnitude – but unfortunately, some tragedies are exacerbated by political motives and actions (or rather, inactions). With some estimates of damages to be upwards of $250 billion and 24 innocent people dead as of this writing, NOW is the time for us to be vigilant in asking questions and planning solutions for our children’s future.
CALIFORNIA’S POLITICIANS DIDN’T START THE FIRES. THEY MADE THEM WORSE
I’ll recap just some of California and Los Angeles’ documented priorities for taxpaying citizens over the last several years:
- Putting tampons in boys’ bathrooms at K-12 schools in the name of “inclusion”
- Touting “Drag Queen Story Times” for children at public libraries
- Prohibiting controlled burns and proven forest management to “protect wildlife”
- Terminating hundreds of competent firefighters and first responders who refused the COVID vaccine
- Reducing essential law enforcement officers via “Defund the Police” initiatives
- Diverting 95% of record statewide rainfall (2023-24) to flow into the ocean rather than properly storing it in reservoirs
- Prioritizing LGBT activism, sexuality and gender over merit when hiring for chief safety positions
IN LA, YOU CAN SMELL THE SMOKE AND FEEL THE RAGE. CALIFORNIA CAN CHANGE. IT STARTS NOW
Were fires inevitable given the conditions? Of course. But, a lack of responsibility from leaders partnered with DEI-driven priorities failed to mitigate carnage – as shamelessly showcased by Gov. Gavin Newsom, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, and even the guy who allegedly oversaw the county-wide emergency alert system when it repeatedly alerted 10 million people to “Evacuate Now” by mistake. (“I’m so sorry, I messed up,” I heard him say on the radio. At least he admitted it, unlike others.)
My own teens have a better sense of responsibility and impending consequences than our elected and appointed officials. According to credible reports, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power previously drained the city’s second-largest reservoir near Pacific Palisades and failed to notify county or city fire departments.
Mayor Karen Bass abandoned the city under her watch and traveled to Africa despite National Weather Service warnings of unprecedented and dangerous fire conditions on Jan. 3.
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Years of budget cuts in areas that warrant priority – including Newsom reportedly slashing over $100 million from fire preparedness in 2024 – continue to deplete resources and exacerbate potential decimation, like we’re experiencing now.
Major fires are not unexpected in California. By all evidence, our leaders at the top are making irresponsible choices not rooted in hindsight, current events or fact-based projections. As a mom who constantly reminds my kids to think ahead, I am infuriated.
As parents, we can hold leaders accountable in public forums and call on our representatives to revisit and reverse failing policies. But, more importantly, we must raise our children to understand the seriousness of responsibility, value merit and fear consequences.
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The “there’s no wrong or right” parenting mentality has got to stop. The “you do you” philosophy in schools must end. The obsession with abandoning merit-based standards and skills in education and the workplace – to check boxes based on sexuality, gender and perceived inequalities – must die. Responsibility and accountability are the bedrock for maintaining a free, functioning, and safe society. (It’s one of our foundational principles for creating PragerU Kids.)
California leadership failed families. Blatant irresponsibility and DEI-focused priorities are now proven accomplices to physical, mental and spiritual destruction for hundreds of thousands – with no end in sight. Not on this California mom’s watch. Teach the kids before it’s too late.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM JILL SIMONIAN
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