By Reginald Stanley. Posted December 30, 2014, 9:10 PM.
A cold Pacific storm, from the Gulf of Alaska, swept into the region Tuesday amid an already cold air mass over Southern California.
The National Weather Service is predicting snow levels to fall down to between 1,500 and 2,000 feet above sea level late Tuesday night, and remaining there through early Wednesday morning. Snow could accumulate to 1 inch locally. Heavy snow is expected in the mountains. Showers are expected to intermittently affect the region until the storm's departure late Wednesday morning.
Snowfall is rare in the Inland Empire, although there have been several such events in the past decade - the most notable and widespread event occurring on November 21st, 2004. |
Other Recent Weather News for Simi Valley, California
-
Storm Totals: May 4th-5th, 2026
May 7, 10:22 PM
-
Tuesday night storm a dud - more rain chances this weekend
April 22, 9:38 PM
-
Late-season Pacific storm brings rain chances Tuesday and Wednesday
April 20, 8:38 PM
-
Storm Totals: April 12th-13th, 2026
April 20, 6:33 PM
-
Overnight showers possible as low pressure brings first rains in over a month
March 31, 10:34 PM
-
Record-breaking March heat wave will peak Thursday-Friday
March 19, 2:27 PM
-
Major heat spell to bring potential record heat to region
March 11, 4:44 AM
-
Santa Ana Winds winds batter region for third day in a row
March 7, 12:31 PM
-
Temperatures soar Friday as winter heat spell peaks
February 27, 9:38 PM
-
Storm Totals: February 19th, 2026
February 20, 6:07 PM
-
Powerful overnight storm produces damaging winds, heavy rain
February 18, 11:57 PM
-
Preliminary Storm Totals: February 16th-17th, 2026; More storms to follow
February 17, 1:39 PM
|