Sunday, March 04, 2012
Rescue, cleanups continue in U.S. tornado zone, 39 dead
By Susan Guyett and John D. Stoll
HENRYVILLE, Ind./CRITTENDEN, Ken. (Reuters) - Rescue teams and residents combed through storm-wracked towns
Janet Clark looks over what is left of her storm damaged home after a tornados hit in Henryville, Indiana March 3, 2012. Clark was able to survive the tornado strike by hiding in the bathroom of her home. The latest in a series of powerful tornadoes raked across a broad swath of the U.S. Midwest and Southeast, killing at least 33 people in four states, authorities said on Saturday. REUTERS/ John Sommers II |
to assess damage on Saturday from a chain of tornadoes that cut a 1,000-mile swath of destruction from the Midwest to the Gulf of Mexico, as the death toll crept up to at least 39 people.
The fast-moving twisters spawned by massive thunderstorms splintered blocks of homes, damaged schools and a prison, and tossed around vehicles like toys, killing 20 people in Kentucky, 14 in neighboring Indiana, three in Ohio and one in Alabama, officials said. Georgia also reported a storm-related death.
"We're not unfamiliar with Mother Nature's wrath out here in Indiana," Governor Mitch Daniels told CNN during a visit to the stricken southeast corner of the state.
"But this is about as serious as we've seen in the years since I've been in this job," he said, standing against the backdrop of the hard-hit town of Henryville, which declared a night-time curfew to prevent looting.
Friday's storms came on top of severe weather earlier in the week in the Midwest and brought the overall death toll from the unseasonably early storms this week to at least 52 people.
Tornadoes smashed Indiana and Kentucky terribly hard, with Alabama, Georgia, Ohio and Tennessee overrun as well.
President Barack Obama called the governors of Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio to offer condolences and assure them that the federal government was ready to help if needed, the White House said.
Television footage from some of the worst-hit towns in Indiana and Kentucky showed houses ripped from their foundations, trees downed and stripped of their foliage, and rubble scattered across wide swathes of land.
In Georgia, light planes were lifted off the tarmac of a regional airport in Paulding County and thrown back onto the ground. In Indiana, a school bus was slammed into a building.
Tony Williams, 46, owner of the Chelsea General Store in southern Indiana, said four people died in the Chelsea area, including 4-year-old Daylin Terry Jackson and his great-grandparents, Terry and Carol Jackson, both in their late 60s.
The boy and his mother, Amanda Jackson, were in a basement when the storm hit on Friday afternoon, and he was torn from her arms by the tornado. The mother survived, but her grandparents who were upstairs both died.
"She was in the cellar with the boy when the tornado hit. It blew him right out of her hands," Williams said. "They found the bodies in the field outside," he added, referring to Daylin and his great-grandparents.
Williams said 60 school children took refuge in his store overnight.
TODDLER HURT BUT ALIVE
In one sign of hope amid the destruction, a 2-year-old girl, orphaned by the tornado, was found alive but badly hurt in a field in southeast Indiana miles from her home after a twister cut through the area, authorities said.
The toddler, who remained in critical condition in a Kentucky hospital, was with members of her extended family. But her parents, a 2-month-old sister and a 3-year-old brother were all killed before she was found, said Cis Gruebbel, a spokeswoman for Kosair Children's Hospital in Louisville, where the child has been since Friday evening.
"When she was brought down here they didn't know who she was," said Brian Rublein, another Kosair spokesman. "At last report she was in critical condition."
In Henryville, birthplace of Harland David "Colonel" Sanders, who founded the Kentucky Fried Chicken fast-food chain, ground zero for the storm was a downtown complex housing an elementary, junior high and high school, where 1,400 students gather on a normal day.
Nearly all them were evacuated on Friday before the tornado struck. But about 40 staff and students who were the last to leave on school buses turned back when they saw ominous signs of the approaching storm in the sky.
They took shelter in an inner office in the elementary school where they rode out the tornado, even as it ripped the front off the building, leaving a dangling mess of twisted metal and insulation.
"We could have been in big trouble," said Pam Horton, the elementary school treasurer. "I will never take tornado warnings lightly again."
"It's shocking," Henryville High School Principal Troy Albert told a local TV station. He said he was "just amazed" that everyone at the school eventually managed to get out safely.
One of the school buses was flipped onto its side by the storm. Another sat with its engine sheared clean off the chassis and its rear end embedded in the front of Budroe's restaurant, a diner across the street where other residents had taken shelter.
Astonishingly, only one resident of the town died, according to rescue officials.
In the Kentucky town of Crittenden, where tornadoes ripped roofs off houses and damaged apartment blocks, low-security prisoners in orange jackets were brought in to help with clean-up efforts.
INSURANCE LOSSES
The band of tornadoes, with at least several dozen sightings and touchdowns, has already been compared to the "Super Outbreak" of twisters of April 1974, one of the largest and most violent in the United States.
Friday's storms came less than a year after a series of tornadoes caused some of the worst insured losses in U.S. history, and the insurance industry is likely facing substantial costs again.
An Indiana official confirmed 14 deaths from the tornadoes on Friday, in four southeastern counties. A spokesman for emergency services in Kentucky reported a statewide death toll of 20, while Ohio officials said there were three deaths in a single county.
In Georgia, an 83-year-old woman was found dead near a drainage pipe after she wandered from her home in severe weather on Friday, possibly to seek better shelter. A public safety official said she may have died after water rose in the pipe.
Storm warnings had been issued throughout the day on Friday from the Midwest to the Southeast, and schools and businesses were closed ahead of the storms after the series of tornadoes earlier in the week that killed 13 people in Kansas, Missouri, Illinois and Tennessee.
This week's violent storms raised fears that 2012 will be another bad year for tornadoes after 550 deaths in the United States were blamed on twisters last year, the deadliest year in nearly a century, according to the National Weather Service.
The highest death tolls were from an outbreak last April in Alabama and Mississippi that claimed 364 lives, and from a May tornado in Joplin, Missouri, that killed 161 people.
Authorities said 40 homes were destroyed and 150 damaged in two northern Alabama counties on Friday. One person died in a home in Tallapoosa County, according to Joe Paul Boone, the director of the local Emergency Management Agency.
Alabama officials said a prison, Limestone Correctional Facility, sustained roof damage to two dormitories, forcing 300 inmates to be moved elsewhere in the facility.
No one was seriously injured at the prison and there were no risks of prisoners escaping, though there was damage to some perimeter fencing and a canteen, said Brian Corbett, a spokesman for the Alabama Department of Corrections.
Tornadoes also struck along the Ohio River in Illinois.
(Additonal reporting by David Adams, Tom Brown, Ian Simpson, Karen Brooks, John Stoll and Dan Whitcomb; Writing by Tom Brown and Cynthia Johnston; Editing by Peter Bohan)
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Deadly U.S. tornadoes create huge insured loss risk
Copyright © 2013 Reuters
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