Hilary drenched Southern California from the coast to the desert resort city of Palm Springs. It's the first tropical storm to hit Southern California in 84 years. FOX's Mills Hayes is in Thousand Palms, California with the latest. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, met with impacted communities across the southern part of the state Sunday night as Tropical Storm Hilary made landfall. The storm, which was preceded by a magnitude 5.1 earthquake at approximately 2:41 p.m. PT on Sunday, is expected to continue unleashing damaging rain and winds throughout the area on Monday, according to FOX Weather. Newsom expanded the number of counties under a state of emergency to ensure that more communities can access the support, services and resources needed in response to the storm, the governor's office said in a statement. He also issued additional emergency orders to give care facilities more flexibility to care for patients during the storm. The governor spoke with local leaders, first responders leading recovery efforts and President Biden to address the ongoing impact of Hilary and the earthquake that struck Sunday afternoon. Subscribe to FOX 10 Phoenix! / @fox10phoenix #fox10phoenix #hurricanehilary #arizona #california #socal #azwx #cawx #tropicalstorm FOX 10 Phoenix delivers breaking news, live events, politics, entertainment, business news and local stories from Phoenix, Arizona and across the nation. Watch more FOX 10 Phoenix on YouTube: Arizona headlines: • Arizona headlines (Archive 2) National headlines: • National headlines Raw footage: • Raw footage