A car stuck on a flooded road near Santa Rosa was found unoccupied and the driver, who officials say ignored warning signs, has not been found.
A car that got stuck driving through a flooded-out road just outside of Santa Rosa is one example of what not to do during a storm.
It is on Slusser Road near River Road.
Sonoma County Fire says the driver ignored the obvious flood gauge and flood warning signs. The car was found unoccupied and the driver has not been found.
It happened where the water was more than a foot deep when it was still dark out Thursday morning.
At the start of the storm, Santa Rosa fire crews gave warnings to stay home if you don't have to be out driving.
"You don't know how deep it is going to be, as well as you don't know the roadway conditions underneath," said Sonoma County Fire spokesperson Karen Hancock. "Has the roadway been compromised? Are there boulders? Are there big potholes? There's a lot of thing it could be, is it washed away?"
When no one was found in the car, crews continued searching in the water.
"They searched the surrounding areas and did not find anybody, they did go wading out into the water to check and that was in the dark, putting our guys at risk out in the dark," Hancock said.
Hancock says the county is juggling multiple hazardous conditions on the second day of the storm, including a tree that fell around 2:30 a.m., taking down power lines on Bohemian Highway, just north of Occidental, temporarily knocking out power to the area.
A tree also fell on a home and power lines in Forestville, sending one person to the hospital Wednesday night.
By morning, PG&E crews were on scene working to replace a downed power pole, but most of the damage was still there.
"There's more rain coming, right, we've got several more days of this so any major repairs, things like that, they're going to be prioritized, we're going to do what we can to make things safe but major cleanup will have to be after the storm passes."
Fire officials say their best advice which cannot be understated enough is to 'Turn around, don't drown.'
It's a message you will hear repeatedly from them because of drivers who continue to ignore the warnings.