tornado

Cleanup Underway After Deadly Tornado Outbreak

The same storm system that hit Texas is poised to move into Louisiana and Mississippi on Tuesday, carrying the risk of dangerous tornadoes and powerful winds

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Severe thunderstorms spawned multiple tornadoes Monday that killed at least one woman and injured nearly a dozen others while demolishing homes, schools, and businesses in several North Texas communities.

Damage from the afternoon and evening storms was scattered across several counties where as many as five tornadoes were believed to have touched down Monday.

The National Weather Service will survey storm reports this week. This map plots tornado reports and wind damage reports in northwestern areas of Fort Worth and the Carrollton area.
The National Weather Service will survey storm reports beginning Tuesday. This map plots tornado reports across North Texas as well as wind damage reports in northwestern areas of Fort Worth and the Carrollton area.

According to the Grayson County Office of Emergency Management, a 73-year-old woman was killed when a tornado slammed into her neighborhood, destroying her Sherwood Shores home Monday afternoon.

The woman has not yet been identified.

The county's emergency management office said there were 10 others injured in Greyson County and that nearly two dozen homes had suffered damage.

JACKSBORO TORNADO

In Jacksboro, about 60 miles northwest of Fort Worth, photographs posted on social media showed a storm ripped the wall and roof from parts of Jacksboro High School, including its gym. Both the Jacksboro Elementary School and the Jacksboro High School both had major damage, but no one was injured at either campus.

Officials in Jacksboro said Monday night that a debris field from the storm is at least two miles wide.

The storm also struck the city’s animal shelter, but the amount of damage wasn’t immediately clear.

Four people had to be rescued from a damaged home but were not seriously hurt.

BOWIE TORNADO

Thirty miles northeast of Jacksboro, near Bowie, damage also was reportedly widespread with reports of some people trapped in collapsed structures. City manager Bert Cunningham said the worst damage was east of the town. Four people suffered minor injuries, said Emergency Manager Kelly McNabb.

The storm system had been predicted to bring strong tornadoes and large hail to parts of Texas on Monday, then move toward the Deep South, where forecasters warned a severe weather outbreak was possible Tuesday.

PHOTOS: Jacksboro Tornado Damage

The rain brought relief to some areas of Texas hit by wildfires, but windy weather was expected to follow which may dry out any wet areas and again put the area at risk of wildfires.

CENTRAL TEXAS TORNADOES

Parts of Central and East Texas, especially the Austin and College Station areas, also saw severe storms reported as tornadoes, the National Weather Service said. Photographs posted on social media showed damage to buildings in the Austin suburbs Round Rock and Elgin. No injuries were immediately reported.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said during a news conference Monday night in suburban Austin’s Williamson County that the “devastating” storms caused significant damage but the state would stand “shoulder to shoulder” with those affected, and he was thankful that there no reports of fatalities.

“We know there are many people whose lives have been completely disrupted and people who’ve lost their homes,” Abbott said. “At the very same time... it may be a miracle also, because even though there’s been some devastating physical damage, to my knowledge, as of right now, there is no report of loss of life, which is just stunning.”

Abbott credited local residents with taking shelter early, and local media who helped report approaching storms.

STORMS CONTINUE TO U.S. SOUTHEAST

On Tuesday, areas of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama could see “a regional severe weather outbreak,” the Storm Prediction Center said. That area, including the cities of Baton Rouge and Jackson, Mississippi, could see strong tornadoes Tuesday, forecasters said.

Federal and state authorities in Louisiana reminded thousands of hurricane survivors living in government-provided mobile homes and recreational vehicle trailers to have an evacuation plan because the structures might not withstand the expected weather.

More than 8,000 households are living in such temporary quarters, Bob Howard, spokesman for a joint information center for the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Louisiana Governor’s Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness, said Monday.

In a joint statement, the agencies said floods may cause the most damage.

“Repeated bouts of heavy rainfall can occur over the same areas, increasing the risk for flooding,” the statement said. “Move to higher ground if you hear of flood warnings.”

Nearly 1,800 households in trailers provided directly by FEMA are unable to return yet to homes damaged or destroyed by hurricanes Laura and Delta in 2020, according to a news release last week. Another 1,600 trailers were deployed for Hurricane Ida’s displaced households, Howard said, and Louisiana has set out more than 4,400 RV trailers for Ida’s victims under a test program paid for by FEMA.

Anyone living in the state or FEMA temporary housing needs to keep cellphones on and fully charged, with the volume high and severe weather alerts enabled, the agencies said.

“The danger is expected to be highest at night,” they added.

And, the release noted, the mobile homes and RV trailers are government property that cannot be moved.

Copyright NBC 5 News and The Associated Press
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