Cleanup Begins After Midwest Storms Kill 4
Hundreds Of Homes, Businesses Damaged As Severe Weather, Tornadoes Strike Four States
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The roof from the Metropolitan apartment complex ripped off and downed these power lines along South Wall Street on Friday May 8, 2009 in Carbondale, Ill. (AP/S. Jahnke, Southern Illinoisan)
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Brian Allen looks at his car destroyed by a downed tree, May 8, 2009, in Carl Junction, Mo. Thunderstorms packing winds up to 120 mph pounded parts of the Midwest on Friday, leaving four people dead, collapsing a church and knocking out power to thousands, authorities said. (AP/T. Rob Brown, Joplin Globe)
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Interactive Funnels Of Fury Explore how and where tornadoes are formed and witness their destructive power.
Hundreds of homes and businesses were damaged or destroyed in the storms Friday in Kansas, Kentucky, Illinois and Missouri that also left 150,000 customers in Missouri without power at the height of outages. Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon declared a state of emergency.
"My primary concern is the safety of Missourians and this executive order makes state agency resources available to help communities respond to the storms," Nixon said.
Two people were killed near Poplar Bluff, Mo., when wind knocked a tree onto their sport utility vehicle. In Dallas County, a man in his 70s had a fatal heart attack after he and his wife were sucked from their home by a tornado and thrown into a field 75 to 100 feet away, said county emergency management director Larry Highfill. The wife was taken to a Springfield hospital and was in fair condition late Friday.
A mobile home was blown off its foundation in southeast Kansas, killing a 54-year-old woman inside. Wind in the area reached 120 mph, destroying the New Albany United Methodist Church, the town's post office and at least one home, authorities said. Major damage also was reported to a high school in Cherokee, Kan.
National Weather Service offices in Springfield, Mo., and St. Louis received multiple reports of tornadoes from one end of Missouri to the other, mostly south of Interstate 44.
The weather service confirmed that at least two tornadoes touched down between 8 a.m. and 8:15 a.m. in southwest Missouri's Greene County. The county's Office of Emergency Management counted three homes and one business destroyed with 298 homes, 29 businesses and 13 schools damaged.
In southern Illinois, the storm system peeled siding and roofs off homes and other buildings, blowing out car windows and tearing up trailer parks.
Carbondale Township fire Capt. Mark Black said he wasn't sure if a tornado touched down in his area but the "winds were just amazing. They were howling and the siding on the trailers was flying through the air and there was a pretty hard rain."
Seeley said the strong line of thunderstorms began moving through the region Friday morning. Wind gusts in the Carbondale area reached 100 mph around 1:30 p.m., and sustained winds were as high as 90 mph.
Carbondale resident Eric Fidler said he rode out the storm in a basement room with his wife, 22-month-old daughter and their dog. When they emerged, dozens of large, old trees had been snapped throughout his neighborhood, but there was little damage to homes.
"I was talking to a neighbor and saying, 'This is just incredible. Everywhere I look, there are enormous trees down, but it missed everybody's house,"' said Fidler.
In sparsely populated Dallas County, Mo., seven people were hurt as wind destroyed 35 homes and damaged numerous others, state emergency management officials said. Highfill said all the damaged homes were in the same path, a strong hint that a tornado was to blame.
In Kentucky, one person was killed after a strong thunderstorm moved through the central part of the state, an emergency management official said. The woman's body was found in a pond, but officials didn't immediately release further details about her death.
Winds destroyed several homes in Madison County, said Michael Bryant, the county's assistant deputy emergency management director.
"Devastated, shocked," said Wade Hall, whose parents, Lonnie and Ann Hall, were headed to the basement when the walls of their house in the county collapsed around them. "You lose everything you work for."
The county has declared a state of emergency and Kentucky national guard troops were en route to help with the aftermath, he said.
NWS Confirms Ala. Tornadoes
The National Weather Service office in Birmingham confirmed at least eight tornadoes touched down across counties in north-central and west Alabama.
Survey teams canvassed storm damaged areas in north-central and west Alabama Wednesday.
The NWS said twisters cut a path of destruction through Walker County, where 3 tornadoes were confirmed. Others counties hit by the severe weather included Blount, Pickens and Tuscaloosa counties. Forecasters in Huntsville said a tornado caused sporadic property damage in Madison County.
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- "...Muslims in other countries on the other side of the world get a personal visit from the White House, but not storm survivors in small town America." Posted by HusseinMalaise
After years of racist war-mongering neos teaching the weak minded amongst Americans to hate people who have never done anything to them, the effects which, by your post, still linger in the space where a mind should be, a trip to repair the damage caused by Bush's criminals right not should be a priority above visiting people who are disadvantaged by an annual occurrence like spring storms.
Any president choosing to visit storm victims would spend all of his term traveling, and soothing bruised spirits, when what we need is so much more. It is a matter of priorities.
Yours are all backwards. - Reply to this comment
- The cat 5 storm in New Orleans was blamed on BUSH, why aren't these weather diasters blamed on DUMBAMA?
Could it be the commies (democrats) are just hypocrites without a brain?
Posted by Rowdy109
Bush was NEVER blamed for the hurricane itself. He was blamed for the chaos and death that followed. He placed FEMA under the direct control of DHS after 9/11. All of the help that was needed in that area for WEEKS after katrina hit was delayed while DHS tried to figure out if helping those people would pose a national security risk. Bush should have told DHS to back off and let FEMA do their job, but he didn't. Because of that people died from hunger, dehydration, heat and lack of medical care. Those are the things Bush was blamed for. - Reply to this comment
- "... We always thought Billie boy loved his Hillary too brianwb....Squawk...." Posted by lili50441
You may have, those of us more educated knew better. - Reply to this comment
- '...Oh really??? Last time we had a weather problem with VAST consequence it seems it was the PRESIDENT'S fault." Posted by Rowdy109
It would only seem that way to an idiot. What was Bush's fault was ignoring the problem despite days of advanced warnings, and also being too slow to respond with assistance. It also didn't help when big mouth Babs cracked jokes about the "minorities".
Keep on dreaming Rowdy-dowdy, President Obama already has a wife, and I don't think he would prefer your type, even if you paid him. - Reply to this comment
- Tornadoes people - not politics - people died here and you two are feckin going on about FEMA -- you've lost the plot.
RIP to those killed....... - Reply to this comment
- It would be so much better in this situation if we had a head of FEMA in place. The problem, as always, is a Radical Right Wing Nut Case who needs attention. It seems the Senator from LA is holding up that person because he's facing a re-election fight and he needs money. What is SO funny about it is that the Director he's holding up is a PROFESSIONAL from Florida who held the position under Governor Jeb BUSH! People who vote for losers like this Senator are flat out of their minds.
- Reply to this comment
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