Authorities fear the showers -- even as they clear the choking smoke and help extinguish flames -- will trigger mudslides and floods in areas scarred by the state's deadliest blaze, complicating the search for remains. Rain could also pile on misery for people forced from their homes, some of whom are living in tented camps outside.
Two weeks after the devastating fire started, 563 people are unaccounted for, Butte County Sheriff and Coroner Kory Honea said. Of those killed, at least 58 of them have been tentatively identified as rescue crews sift through debris, searching for the remains of loved ones.
The rain could make the process of scouring through the ash and debris more complicated, and lead to treacherous conditions for firefighters, officials said.
It has been raining on and off for the past several hours in the town of Paradise, which was wiped out by the fire. A flash flood watch remains in effect through Friday morning, CNN meteorologist Gene Norman said.
1 million people are under flash flood watch
Almost 1 million people are under flash flood watch in that part of California, where 4 to 6 inches of rain are expected through Friday. Rain began falling in Paradise on Wednesday, with nearly an inch dropped by late afternoon. Potential downpours could end the fire season or at least ease the risk while bringing new dangers.
"Rapidly rising water could flood roads, hampering search efforts and putting displaced residents camping outdoors in peril," Norman said.
Search for missing to be 'much more difficult'
The first bout of heavy rain is expected to hit Butte County. The heaviest amounts will come Thursday afternoon through Friday afternoon, with between 2.5 and 4 inches expected during that 24-hour period.
When the rain comes, it's going to have major effects on the debris.
"It's going to consolidate the material and make it more dense. And it's going to present much more like soil. So anything we find or hope to find that's still there, it's going to make a difficult task ... that much more difficult," said Brian Ferreira, rescue squad officer for California Task Force 4.
In Paradise, a town virtually wiped out by the Camp Fire, the storms could cause ash flows, or a slurry of ash swept away by rainwater.
The Camp Fire has charred more than 153,000 acres and was 85% contained Thursday morning. It has destroyed more than 13,500 homes.
Evacuees flee, some brace for flooding
Across Butte County, residents prepared for a possible deluge.
Jennifer Debrunner is staying at the Butte County Fairgrounds in a motor home loaned by a stranger. She told CNN affiliate KCRA that her family covered everything they own with a tarp.
Debrunner said she knows the rain will bring "a lot of mud, a lot of cold" to the area. But this Thanksgiving week, Debrunner said she's grateful her family has a borrowed RV.
Cady Machado has been camping out in a Walmart parking lot with her husband and 9-month-old baby.
Due to the expected rain, Machado told CNN affiliate KTXL, she's sending her child to her sister's in Arizona.
As for herself and her husband?
"There's a nice bridge with my name on it to go underneath where I won't get flooded out with my husband," she told KTXL.
Woolsey Fire now contained
Rain also is expected in Southern California, where the Woolsey Fire has killed three people and torched nearly 100,000 acres. It's now 100% contained.
The Woolsey burn area is expected to get less than an inch of rain. But it's still at risk of mudslides and minor debris flow from Wednesday to Thursday, the National Weather Service said.
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