Santa Barbara County News and Events

New Year’s brings new rainfall and flood threat to California

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By CNN Meteorologist Briana Waxman

(CNN) — Another series of atmospheric river-enhanced storms is set to soak California as the new year begins, bringing a flood threat back to the state just days after a destructive Christmas-week storm left rivers high and soils waterlogged.

The midweek storm lacks the extreme ingredients of last week’s flooding, but it arrives in a state already pushed to its limits. With little room for additional water, rainfall rates rather than totals will determine where problems emerge as California rings in the new year under another active weather pattern.

The first low-pressure system is expected to reach Southern California late New Year’s Eve, then spread north through much of the state into New Year’s Day. The Weather Prediction Center has placed much of Southern California in a Level 2 of 4 flood threat Wednesday and Thursday.

Coastal and valley areas such as downtown Los Angeles could see 1 to 2 inches of rain, with 2 to 4 inches possible in foothills and mountains. Even moderate bursts of rain could trigger flooding, mudslides or debris flows, especially near burn scars and steep terrain.

Evacuation warnings are in effect for parts of Los Angeles County near recent burn scars as rain moves in Wednesday night. The voluntary warnings begin at 11 a.m. PT and are meant to give residents time to prepare for possible mud or debris flows.

The Wrightwood area in San Bernardino County, devastated by Christmas Eve flooding in the Bridge Fire burn scar, is again under an evacuation warning as the threat of mud and debris flows returns.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the state has prepositioned crews and equipment in Los Angeles and Ventura counties ahead of the rain.

The first wet Tournament of Roses Parade in two decades

The timing raises the stakes, especially in Southern California, where the 137th Tournament of Roses Parade takes place Thursday morning in Pasadena. Rain arriving Wednesday night will affect parade-goers camping along the route, with downpours continuing into Thursday morning. This is expected to be the first wet Rose Parade since 2006, according to the National Weather Service.

This system is only the first of three in a conga line that could affect the waterlogged state through early next week. Conditions change late Friday into Saturday as colder air drops snow levels below major passes, including Interstate 80 through Donner Pass. Over a foot of snow is likely at Sierra Nevada ski resorts, though exact totals remain uncertain and could make mountain travel hazardous.

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Some Sabor Champagne to Savor New Year

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SANTA BARBARA COUNTY, Calif. (KEYT) Most people celebrating the New Year with champagne will pop the cork and pour it into flutes, but some will open their bubbly with a saber.

But even experienced folks said it isn't always easy.

It may take a couple of tries to pour your toast from the sharp edges of sabor cut bottle.

The Skidmores explained how to use a sabor to strike the seam and the lip.

They said the key is to make sure you put the bottle on ice or in the freezer upside down beforehand.

The colder the bottler, the cleaner the break.

They toasted 2026 early and then shared their resolutions.

"To celebrate more ,have more reasons to celebrate and sabor more champagn," said Roberta Skidmore.

" Spend more time with friends and family and follow our grandkids, whatever they do, and just enjoy being together with my wife. We've got 46 years and still going," said Kevin Skidmore.

The couple are ringing in the New Year around a campfire at Refugio State Beach campground.

New Year's resolutions don't have to be hard to keep.

The idea is to savor the New Year.

The post Some Sabor Champagne to Savor New Year appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Today is Warren Buffett’s last day as Berkshire CEO. Business leaders tell us what they learned from him

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By Luciana Lopez, Elijah Shama, Richard Quest, Erin Burnett, CNN

(CNN) — Warren Buffett has worn many hats over the years: The stock-picking Oracle of Omaha. An avuncular, Dairy-Queen-eating, Coke-drinking product pitchman. A living symbol of capitalism and its complexities.

But for generations of business leaders, the 95-year-old has also served as something else: a teacher.

Buffett’s combination of success and sagacity has made him one of the most famous investors in the world, “on the Mount Rushmore of business leaders in our country,” Eli Lilly CEO David Ricks said. And through his advice-packed investor letters, his hourslong quote-fest annual meetings, his choices at work or in his personal life, Buffett has taught CEOs and executives around the world how to run their businesses and, in many cases, their lives.

Buffett, who’s spent much of his life among the top 10 richest people in the world, is stepping down Wednesday as head of conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway; protégé Greg Abel will take the reins Thursday.

As the iconic investor steps down from his post, several business leaders told CNN about the lessons Buffett leaves behind.

‘Predicting rain doesn’t count’

As a journalist, I’ve covered countless earnings reports. None were as fun as Berkshire Hathaway’s, in large part because Buffett remains among the business world’s top communicators.

He said what he meant, and he never used a 10-cent word if a one-cent word would do. And he was flat-out funny in a way that made covering him a hoot.

“What I’ve always admired about Warren Buffett, and (his late business partner) Charlie Munger for that matter, is their use of plain English and plain language to explain difficult concepts,” Steve Hafner, the CEO of Kayak, said. “It takes a lot of skill to take a complex issue and just split it to the bare minimum.”

Their dry wit made “their shareholder letter one of my favorite reads,” he added.

Some gems among those shareholder letters:

  • “It’s only when the tide goes out that you learn who’s been swimming naked.”
  • “Predicting rain doesn’t count; building arks does.”
  • “I’ve reluctantly discarded the notion of my continuing to manage the portfolio after my death – abandoning my hope to give new meaning to the term ‘thinking outside the box.’”

‘Our favorite holding period is forever’

One theme among the CEOs who spoke to CNN: Buffett’s legendary patience. Buffett was known to sit on ginormous piles of cash at Berkshire, waiting for the right opportunity to invest. And when he did invest, he was in it for the long haul: “our favorite holding period is forever,” he wrote to shareholders in 1989.

Investor, podcaster, entrepreneur and former White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci wrote to Buffett 30 years ago, saying he was buying Berkshire shares for his daughter.

“And since she was one and a half years old with a life expectancy of 84 years, she had 82 and a half years left in which to hold her stock,” Scaramucci said.

“He wrote back very quickly and said that was a manifestation of short-termism. His own intention was to hold the stock for a hundred years.”

‘I will be rut

Israel to suspend operations of several aid groups in Gaza as countries warn of renewed ‘catastrophic’ humanitarian crisis

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By Helen Regan, Hira Humayun, Eugenia Yosef and Mohammed Tawfeeq, CNN

(CNN) — Several international humanitarian organizations, including Doctors Without Borders (MSF), face being barred from working in Gaza from Thursday for failing to comply with Israel’s new restrictions for aid groups operating in the devastated enclave.

Israel said Tuesday it will suspend the operations of international aid groups that did not renew their registration, which includes requiring organizations working in Gaza to provide personal details of their staff members.

Aid agencies have repeatedly voiced concerns over those requirements, citing the safety of their employees.

Israel’s move comes as 10 countries warned that Gaza’s humanitarian situation is facing “renewed deterioration” and that conditions in the enclave “remain catastrophic.”

Gaza, which lies in ruins, is enduring a harsh winter, with heavy rain and plunging temperatures worsening already dire living conditions.

Fierce rain and strong winds have destroyed the flimsy, waterlogged tents many Palestinians are forced to survive in, and at least 20 people have been killed by homes and buildings collapsing as they sought shelter from the severe weather conditions, according to the Hamas-run Government Media Office in Gaza (GMO).

“As winter draws in, civilians in Gaza are facing appalling conditions with heavy rainfall and temperatures dropping,” the foreign ministers of Canada, the United Kingdom, Denmark, Finland, France, Iceland, Japan, Norway, Sweden and Switzerland said in a statement Tuesday.

Relief groups say Israel’s decision affects more than two dozen aid organizations and that suspending their operations in Gaza “will cost the lives of Palestinians.”

“Removing these humanitarian organizations now will deepen exposure, illness, and preventable deaths,” Refugees International said in a statement. “It is a pretext to further restrict aid to Gaza while silencing independent aid organizations.”

Israel said its registration rules are to prevent Hamas from exploiting international aid, a claim the UN and aid groups have rejected. A US government review earlier this year found no evidence of widespread theft by Hamas, claims both Israel and the US State Department have made.

“The registration requirement is aimed at preventing the involvement of terrorist elements and at safeguarding the integrity of humanitarian activity, as demonstrated in past cases,” the Israeli foreign ministry said in a statement.

Concerns over Israel’s registration rules

UN agencies and aid groups had repeatedly voiced concerns over Israel’s registration rules.

Israel said it notified international organizations in March that they needed to comply with the requirements. It said those who did not renew their registration were told their authorization would end on January 1 and they would have to withdraw two months later.

The Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT), the Israeli agency tasked with facilitating aid distribution in Gaza, said medical charity MSF “chose not to cooperate with the registration process and refused to provide Israel’s Min

SLO Speed Ahead: Cal Poly Finalizes Jungle Float for Pasadena’s Rose Parade

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PASADENA, Calif.—Creative chaos, construction, and collaboration have made the Cal Poly team an unstoppable force.
 
“It's really cool to see how we all can come together from two different campuses to build a float like this. It’s pretty incredible,” said Cal Poly Flower Fields Manager Afton Phillips.

It’s the only student-designed and student-built float in the Rose Parade.
 
The magic is in the details and the story.
 
A story that revolves around this year’s theme— “The Magic in Teamwork.”
 
The Cal Poly float is named “Jungle Jumpstart”  
 
“This is where the story's starting. So our robot is sitting here on the ground in the forest, and this lemur is going to start the spark that will light it up,” said Cal Poly Float President Aubrey Goings.
 
Students say the float shows the relationship between nature and technology through the story of a rainforest community coming together to restore its robot friend that had broken down.
 
The animals include a frog, monkey, jaguar, lemurs, and a toucan.
 
“We have some monstera, some ginger, some heliconias. There's lots of things that you find in the jungle. We're really trying to immerse everyone into the atmosphere,” said Goings.

It's an undertaking that takes thousands of hours with plant experts, mechanical engineers and everything in between.
  
Students and volunteers helped create the design and construct the mechanical elements.
 
“This year we actually have, a frog opening and closing a panel. Well, it's closing the panel. The panel opens back up on its own, and it's two, two different mechanisms interacting, in a very unique way that we had to, like, coordinate a collision zone and everything,” said Cal Poly Slo Construction Chair Ryan Newton.

Thursday’s Tournament of Roses will mark 137 years of the annual tradition.
 

The post SLO Speed Ahead: Cal Poly Finalizes Jungle Float for Pasadena’s Rose Parade appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

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