Such damage is more common in the south, especially inland, where spring warmth comes on much stronger than here but final freeze dates aren’t too disimilar from ours. Things start growing weeks before they’re fully out of the woods in terms of cold blasts.
Our muted early spring warmth (coastal location/seasonal lag) coupled with very early last freeze dates for our latitude (coastal location/heavy urbanization) usually work to prevent such damage from occurring here in most cases, since things generally don’t grow an appreciable amount before our last freeze occurs there isn’t much (if any) new growth to damage. This may change as our climate warms, this March has been a good example of that, sustained warmth followed by a sharp cold outbreak.