LOS ANGELES — California is nowhere near done with the recent string of storms that have killed at least 17 people since last month, driven thousands from their homes and submerged roads and communities under flood waters.

Four more atmospheric rivers are heading toward the Golden State in the next 10 days, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office tweeted Tuesday, warning residents to “continue to prepare for heavy rainfall, extreme winds, and dangerous conditions.”

After a brief Tuesday night respite, the next storm is expected to arrive Wednesday in Northern California and also impact the Pacific Northwest. Another system is projected to hit Saturday and Sunday.

“The endless stream of atmospheric river events will re-focus on Wednesday across northern California,” the National Weather Service said. “Once again, heavy to excessive rain on already saturated ground may produce more flooding.”

The parade of storms has opened sinkholes capable of swallowing cars, caused numerous landslides, turned roadways into waterways, toppled countless trees, buried mountain towns in snow and left more than 130,000 homes and businesses without power. 

“We expect these storms to continue at least through the 18th of this month,” Newsom said. “The magnitude of this is not isolated in smaller communities. It is scaled across the largest state in our union.” 

EVACUATIONS AMID GIANT STORMS:5-year-old swept away by floodwaters; sinkhole swallows vehicles: Updates

Other developments:

►The pedestrian passageway in Los Angeles’ Union Station flooded because of the downpours of the last two days, prompting workers to shuttle some of the passengers on golf carts. 

►Wind gusts approaching 70 mph forced flight delays at San Francisco International Airport. Storm debris on the tracks delayed commuter trains, and fallen trees and branches snarled traffic around the city. Many residents were jolted from their sleep around 2 a.m. by a raucous electrical storm.