Monday, November 18, 2013

Tornadoes Tearing up the Mid-west

 

Rescuers pull an injured resident from a demolished house after a tornado destroyed parts of Washington, Ill.


A violent storm system pounded the Midwest on Sunday with tornadoes, strong winds and heavy rain, killing at least six people, injuring dozens and collapsing homes and other buildings.
National Weather Service officials confirmed that several dozen tornadoes touched down in Illinois, Indiana and Kentucky.The White House said President Obama had been briefed on the damage and was receiving regular updates. The Federal Emergency Management Agency said it had sent emergency teams and liaisons into affected states.
"Residents should continue to monitor weather conditions as they develop and follow the direction of local officials," FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate said. "Be prepared for power outages and dangerous road conditions as a result of downed power lines and flooding.''

Tornadoes struck Brookport, Nashville and Minden Illinois. Michael Perdun of Washington Illinois said, "The whole neighborhood's gone. The wall of my fireplace is all that is left of my house,"
 He said his neighborhood was wiped out in a matter of seconds. Illinois State Police Trooper Dustin Pierce said the tornado cut a path from one end of Washington to the other, knocking down power lines, uprooting trees and rupturing gas lines.

Washington Alderman Tyler Gee told Chicago station WLS-TV that destruction was so great "I couldn't even tell what street I was on." He said hundreds of homes were "just completely flattened.''
Just how many tornadoes hit was unclear. According to the National Weather Service's website, a total of 65 tornadoes struck, most of them in Illinois.

In Indianapolis, a historic post office, built in 1903, was  completely demolished by strong winds and heavy rains.
"We had just acquired the building in December and taken out all the interior of the building, gutted it and solidified the structure a little bit," said Megan Bennett, a volunteer with the Irvington Development Organization. "Then bad weather comes along and blows it down. The reinforcement steel was set to be delivered tomorrow, so it's really heartbreaking."

A man walks through a storm-damaged home in Gifford, Ill.

A tornado hit near East Peoria in central Illinois, where photos from the area showed devastating damage. 
Firefighters look over damage to trailers Nov. 17, 2013, at Summit Village east of Marion, Ind., after storms blew through Marion and Grant County.

Stacy Broniak and Todd Woolf, a Grissom firefighter, sift through debris looking for medication and oxygen supplies for Broniak's grandmother, Colleen Carney, who lived in the destroyed house  in Kokomo, Ind.

"There are reports of significant damage in the towns of Washington and Pekin, Ill.," Fugate said. "There's been a wide disruption of communications in those areas also. We have dispatched staff and communications equipment to help support the local authorities. There are reports of people trapped (in collapsed buildings), and technical rescue teams have been dispatched.
"It's a pretty widespread event here in Illinois," Fugate said.
He did not have specifics on how many people were injured or on damages from the storms. Officials had opened a shelter in the Washington area, and the state's Emergency Operations Center had been activated.

Significant storm damage also was reported in Coal City in Grundy County, and in LaSalle County.
Heavy winds knocked out power to 140,000 customers in Michigan, including in the Detroit area.
The weather service had confirmed at least four tornadoes in Indiana by midafternoon, as central Indiana remained under a tornado watch until 8 p.m. The storms left at least 13,000 people across Indiana without power, according to Duke Energy.
"This is a very dangerous situation," Russell Schneider, director of the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center, told the Associated Press at midday Sunday. "Approximately 53 million people in 10 states are at significant risk for thunderstorms and tornadoes."

In Peoria, OSF Saint Francis Medical Center, treated 24 tornado victims Sunday evening for injuries ranging from head wounds and broken bones to cuts and bruises, said hospital spokeswoman Kristen Johnson. Six of the wounded were trauma patients, meaning they were the most severely injured, she said. Eight to 10 people were treated at and released from UnityPoint Health-Methodist Hospital, also in Peoria, hospital spokesman Duane Funk said.

Earlier Sunday, the National Weather Service issued a "high risk" alert of severe weather for eastern Illinois, Indiana, western Ohio and far southwest lower Michigan, with conditions favorable for a tornado outbreak and widespread damaging winds. This is the first time in decades that a "high risk" area was issued so far north in the month of November, according to meteorologist Jeff Masters of the Weather Underground.



The agency says strong winds and atmospheric instability are expected to sweep across the central Plains before pushing into the Mid-Atlantic states and Northeast at night. The potential for strong and long-track tornadoes will continue in the Ohio Valley and adjacent Midwestern states.
The storms are expected to diminish in intensity Sunday night into Monday, but strong wind gusts will remain possible for parts of New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland and New Jersey, according to the Weather Channel.
 
 

 


1 comment:

  1. As you folks view these videos and read these articles of yet more devastation around the world, would you please consider that there is and always has been an alternative way to BUILD TO LIVE in our world; That as you see time after time the SQUARE STRUCTURE succumb to NATURES NATURAL FLOW; We "CAN" create a SUSTAINABLE WORLD if we can LEARN TO BUILD TO FLOW WITH NATURE & NOT TO RESIST IT! http://buildtoflowwithnaturenottoresistit.blogspot.com/

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