Bill Patzert, a climatologist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said the Los Angeles area is only at 4 percent of normal rainfall.
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"In the last 10 months in downtown Los Angeles, we've had less than an inch of rain. It has been one of the driest 10 months in Southern California history," he said.
Patzert said since the start of what is normally the rainy season on Oct. 1, there should have been around 3 inches of rainfall.
After five consecutive years of drought, last year's rainfall was slightly above average.
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Northern and central California had record-breaking snowpack, but Southern California didn't get heavy snowfall.
"(It) felt like a deluge, but it really wasn't that much. But this year, we're back in drought mode," he added.
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Patzert said with winter about to begin, the outlook isn't promising. The climatologist said it appears to be La Nina season.
"Normally, our wettest months are January, February and March, so there is still a little hope," Patzert said. "But the presence of La Nina here at the equator doesn't bode well for winter rainfall."