SAN JOSE, California – Magdalena Moore, the principal of Jeanne R. Meadows Elementary School, waded through puddles between classroom buildings during a rare bright spot earlier this week. A slew of Pacific storms and a bomb cyclone have ravaged the San Francisco Bay Area for the last two weeks, hitting her school and several others.

Students in San Jose are part of about four million who attend schools in the nation’s flood zones, according to a report from Pew Charitable Trusts. Kids across the Golden State are the latest to be affected by a weather system that has killed several people, left billions in damage and forced many from their homes as they return to in-person learning following the winter break. The unusual rain in a state known for its clear skies and warm weather, and infrastructure not necessarily built for prolonged downpours and floods, is leaving schools to grapple with the consequences.

Some California schools have had to delay their returns from winter break, and many school officials spent the last two weeks coordinating to provide meals for displaced families and juggling disruptions in transportation due to flooded roads and fallen trees. Some lost power and internet connections and activated power outage protocols to keep classrooms open. And others have seen drops in attendance – a financial hit for schools that are in part funded by how many kids go to school each day, several school districts contacted by USA TODAY said.

Officials said they hope the situation doesn’t worsen with the forecast calling for more rain. More storms are expected to roll into Northern California this weekend and early next week.

“Keeping our fingers crossed,” said John Sasaki, a spokesman for the Oakland Unified School District.

In San Francisco, for example, Superintendent Matt Wayne and school officials are working to get sandbags, assess leaks and damages to school buildings and work with the city to clean up fallen trees to “prevent future incidents as the weather permits,” he wrote in a Jan. 9 letter to the school community. The city’s mayor issued a local proclamation of emergency last week. 

“We are committed to mobilizing and responding to weather-related emergencies to mitigate the impact of the storm on school sites,” Wayne wrote in the letter, while also thanking district staff “who have been working tirelessly to ensure that our schools remain safe places where students can learn, get a nutritious meal, and be in the care of a trusted adult.”

More:98% of California homeowners don’t have flood insurance; drivers urged to ‘Turn around, don’t drown’