Southern California was beginning to dry out from two days of virtually nonstop rain today, although thousands of people remained without electricity in Los Angeles County and more rain is in the forecast over the next three days.

Long Beach received 2.44 inches of rain over the past three days.

Mountain High received 93 inches of snow, and Mount Wilson got 40 inches.

Some highway and surface streets were flooded Saturday, and authorities advised people not to travel if they can avoid it. Skies were partially clear Sunday morning, but the NWS said travel in the mountain areas would “still be very ‘dicey’ through the day.”

Several thousand people remained without electricity Sunday due to weather-related outages.

A Los Angeles Department of Water and Power worker was in intensive care after suffering an injury while working to restore power Saturday in the San Fernando Valley, the utility said Sunday. The LADWP said 49,000 of its 1.5 million electric customers were still without power late Sunday morning. Since the start of the storm Friday, crews had restored power to more than 98,000 customers.

Meanwhile, Southern California Edison’s outage map showed 33 outages affecting more than 4,800 customers in Los Angeles County as of 11 a.m. Sunday, and five outages in Orange County affecting more than 1,300 customers.

Another storm system was expected to bring periods of rain and mountain snow to the Southland late Sunday through Wednesday. Gusty winds are possible for periods of time, especially Monday, before a warming and drying trend takes shape later in the week.

Scattered showers, isolated thunderstorms and some hail were expected Sunday afternoon and evening and early Monday, with the potential for minor urban flooding.

For the first wave of the storm, NWS models suggested 0.25 to 0.50 inches of rain across coastal and valley areas with 0.75 to 1 inch in the mountains.

The following two waves are predicted to be much lighter, forecasters said, with sunny skies returning on Thursday.

Temperatures continue to be well below normal. The daytime high on Sunday was 55 degrees in Long Beach, and that is  expected to be roughly the same over the next few days.