California is a state of extremes. While some regions struggle with chronic drought, others drown in storms brewed up by EI Nino, the in-crease in Pacific Ocean temperatures that occurs roughly every three to seven years. San Bernardino County gets less than 20 inches of rain a year, but it's prone to flash flooding as storms roll in from the ocean, over mountains, and on to the Mohave Desert to the east. With El Nino expected to exacerbate extreme weather patterns, the nation's largest county decided to more accurately target emergency monitoring and response resources by replacing slow manual processes and paper log records with tab lets and a ready-to-use app.
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