Hilary updates: Over 1 foot of rain hits San Bernardino as LA avoids catastrophe

Hilary soaked Southern California, flooding roads and knocking out power.

All tropical storm warnings have been canceled across Southern California as the remnants of Hilary, which no longer meet the threshold of a tropical cyclone, track north.

Once a Category 4 hurricane, Hilary tore through Southern California with historic rainfall on Sunday, flooding roads and knocking out power.


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Gov. Newsom declares state of emergency ahead of Hurricane Hilary

California Governor Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency for much of Southern California on Saturday ahead of Hurricane Hilary making landfall.

"California has thousands of people on the ground working hand-in-hand with federal and local personnel to support communities in Hurricane Hilary's path with resources, equipment and expertise," the governor said in a statement.

There are currently “more than 7,500 boots on the ground deployed” to help local communities the governor’s statement continued.

The impacts of the storm are expected to begin Saturday evening lasting through Monday, according to the statement.


Biden briefed on Hurricane Hilary

President Joe Biden has received a briefing from senior staff on the latest preparedness plans for Hurricane Hilary and his team is working with state and local agencies ahead of the storm, according to the White House.

FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell said earlier she has been providing "continuous updates" to the White House ahead of the storm.

-ABC News' Justin Gomez


LA County Parks to temporarily close

The County of Los Angeles Parks system said it will close on Sunday and Monday "out of an abundance of caution" due to Hilary.

That includes trails, lakes, beaches, pools, botanical gardens and playgrounds. All programs and classes are also canceled.

"While parks are not fenced in, visitors are encouraged to stay home," LA County Parks said.

-ABC News' Jennifer Watts and Alex Stone


Hilary weakens to category 2 hurricane

Hilary continues to weaken as it moves north-northwest, now a category 2 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 110 mph.


Hilary makes landfall in Baja California, Mexico

Tropical Storm Hilary has made landfall just south of the U.S. border.

The storm system moved over the northern Baja California peninsula in Mexico at about 11 a.m. PT, the National Hurricane Center said in its latest advisory.

Hilary is currently located aout 215 miles south-southeast of San Diego and is moving north-northwest at 25 mph.

Maximum sustained winds have weakened to 65 mph.

The storm is expected to move through Southern California on Sunday afternoon, bringing catastrophic and life-threatening flooding over portions of the Southwest through Monday.

-ABC News' Dan Peck