CBS/AP/ September 8, 2012, 11:41 AM

Severe weather in Northeast; Tornado in NYC

This photo provided by Joey Mure shows a storm cloud over the Breezy Point area of Queens, New York, Saturday, Sept. 8, 2012. A Fire Department spokesman said there were power lines down and possibly other damage in the area.

This photo provided by Joey Mure shows a storm cloud over the Breezy Point area of Queens, New York, Saturday, Sept. 8, 2012. A Fire Department spokesman said there were power lines down and possibly other damage in the area. / AP Photo/Joey Mure

Last Updated 4:32 p.m. ET

(CBS/AP) The National Weather Service has confirmed that a tornado struck a beachfront neighborhood in New York City.

Videos taken by bystanders show the funnel cloud hurling sand and debris in the air as it moves through the Breezy Point section of the Rockaway peninsula in Queens on Saturday. A New York Fire Department spokesman said there were power lines down and possibly other damage.

There are no reports of injuries.

Radar data, video and witness reports confirmed that the cyclone that hit New York City was a tornado, National Weather Service meteorologist Dan Hofmann said. He said an inspection team would assess the damage and before estimating the strength of the storm. Hofmann said some witnesses were reporting that the wind had been strong enough to lift cars off the pavement.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) confirmed that a funnel cloud was also sighted in Chantilly, Va., and a second possible funnel cloud has been sighted in Forestville, Md.

The utility Dominion reports more than 100,000 customers are without power in Virginia.

The National Weather Service has issued a public severe weather advisory for much of the Northeastern United States for Saturday afternoon and evening, Sept. 8, 2012.

/ NWS
The NWS has issued a public severe weather advisory for much of the Northeastern United States for Saturday afternoon and evening.

The advisory said significant severe thunderstorms, including the development of widespread damaging winds and a few tornadoes, are expected across portions of the lower Great Lakes, New England and Mid-Atlantic States Saturday afternoon into tonight.

Tornado watches are in effects for New York City and parts of New York State, Northeast Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Vermont, until 10:00 p.m. Saturday.

The strong upper-level weather system will interact with a moist and unstable airmass as it moves into the northeastern U.S.

Areas most likely to experience this activity include Western and Central Connecticut, Northern Delaware, Western and Central Massachusetts, Northeastern Maryland, Southwestern New Hampshire, New Jersey, Central and Eastern New York, Eastern Pennsylvania, and Central and Southern Vermont.

Video taken by Roy Currlin shows a funnel cloud coming ashore at Breezy Point in Queens. Click on the video player below.

"It was crazy," said neighborhood resident Joseph Mure, who was in the shower when the storm hit, and went outside to snap a picture of the retreating funnel. "There were a lot of sirens going off. You could see it twisting."

Another video posted on YouTube by gerritsenbeach (click on the player below) shows what appears to be a funnel cloud at Breezy Point.

Joe FitzGerald posted this video on YouTube (click below):

Thomas Sullivan, general manager of the Breezy Point Surf Club, said the twister ripped up cabanas and deck chairs.

"A lot of rain, a lot of wind," he said. "It picked up picnic benches. It picked up Dumpsters."

Half an hour later the weather was beautiful, but he's had to close the club to clean up the damage.

Lizann Maher, a worker at Kennedy's Restaurant at the edge of Jamaica Bay, said she saw a "swirling cone kind of thing with something flying in it" come down and then head back out into the water toward Brooklyn.

"It was scary. We have all glass so we kept saying, 'Get away from the glass!' just in case it did come back around," she said.

The tornado struck as part of a line of storms that were expected to bring damaging winds, hail, heavy rain and possibly more tornadoes throughout the mid-Atlantic and Northeast on Saturday. Across New York state, in Buffalo, strong winds from a broad front of thunderstorms blew roofing off of some buildings and sent bricks falling into the street.

The storm system killed four people, including a child, in Oklahoma on Friday.

4, including infant, killed in Okla. storms

Severe storms are also possible from the Northeastern United States into the Carolinas.

Damaging wind gusts will be common across the moderate risk area, and some locations could receive wind gusts of over 70 mph.

State and local emergency managers are monitoring this developing situation. Those in the threatened area are urged to review severe weather safety rules and to listen to radio, TV and NOAA weather radio for possible watches and warnings.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
17 Comments Add a Comment
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NCPHIF says:
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SoScrewMe says:
let's, just for the sake of argument, concede that this freak tornado is the direct result of GLOBAL WARMING (or is it GLOBAL climate change...I can't keep up). If we in America park our cars, shut down coal, oil and gas fired electricity generation and revert to organic farming (with tilling and harvesting powered by horses, presumably) greatly reducing our "carbon footprint", just what the freak does it mean - ON A GLOBAL BASIS - when India, China, Viet Nam and a whole host of others continue to pollute in a massive, wholesale, industrial way? Liberal/progressive democrats are MORONS!
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Holmboy77 says:
Breezy Point is part of NYC just as much as anywhere else. It is a private, gated community located on the west end of the Rockaway Peninsula, and is part of the borough of Queens. As for the second video, that was taken about 7 miles away from a Dayton apartment on Rockaway Beach Blv in Rockaway Park. The tornado however, went through the town of Breezy Point.
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retmw1 says:
Good thing Wall St. wasn't open today, stock prices would have dropped and oil prices would have skyrockted.
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buzzy6540 says:
Seriously? A tornado in NYC? The headline had me all ready to watch the financial district getting blown to smithereens by 250 mph winds. But, as with most news headlines, it was completely inaccurate. Never heard of Breezy Point, NYC. Looks like a nice place, and it may be part of "NYC", but please, don't emphasize TORNADO IN NYC, just to find out it was just some beach sand getting blown around 25 miles from ground zero!!
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AOCGUY replies:
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If Breezy Point is in NYC then the headline was accurate and your post nonsensical.
buzzy6540 replies:
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When people hear, or read "NYC", most will automatically think of the skyline area. Not of the obscure little outlying areas where the NYC skyline can't even be seen. The headline is made to think that the skyline area has been hit by a tornado, when it actuality, it was miles away.
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goscott44 says:
Then, a Mighty Angel picked up a boulder shaped like a huge Mill Stone, and threw it into the


Atlantic Ocean,


and cried mightily with a loud voice saying!!

Just as I have thrown away this stone, the great city of Babylon will be thrown down with violence , and shall never be found again!!!

The Book Of Revelation, Chapter 18 verse 21
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BigMykul says:
Well, maybe the next one will be like the one in LA in The Day After Tomorrow
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Smarkley37 says:
LOL... in the Breezy Point Surf Club, listen at the 32second mark. "****! It's a tornado"
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dennisall77 says:
Of course, tornados have happened before so it cannot possiblt be global warming! What deniers fail to understand (and their statements always show their stupidity on this) is that weather events are not climate. Many long-term events constitute climate (avg temp, avg rainfall, etc)> So when one starts seeing unusual weather events over and over in a certain area, one can state that the climate for that area is changing. The NE rarely has had tornados, but now are seeing them more frequently, even in non-tornado seasons.

Anyway, we are now paying an exhorbitant price for our folly of allowing the right wing to stop efforts to curb CO2 pollution. Droughts, floods, wildfires, extremes everywhere. A mild winter is bad too becuase pests normally killed off by hard freezes now survive. Happens elesewhere but they are prepared where they normally survive with natural predators or human resources.... BUT all this is too complicated for deniers to understand... so they just throw up their hands and decide to go the easy route and aagree with Fuxx News and say"not true."
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ramasirch replies:
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Right on brother. We will look back at our folly for allowing the world to have been guided by these greedy and short sighted dirty energy (Koch Industries) supported companies. The world will be a much more difficult place for much of humanity because of them.
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BruceHillberry says:
No such thing as climate change (global warming) huh, Republicans!
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jschm2681 replies:
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there have been tornados in the northeast before. Wait for some scientific non-manipulated evidence supported by qualified unbiased scientists before jumping to a conclusion. The scientists shot themselves in the foot when they manipulated the data and vilified scientists who disagreed with them. Science is best when conclusions are presented by qualified unbiased scientists who do not have an agenda.
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