Monster
Texas tornado kills six, seven people missing
Six
people were dead and seven missing after a powerful tornado ripped
through a neighborhood that included housing for the poor in the
north Texas town of Granbury, marking the deadliest severe storm
outbreak in the United States so far this year.
WHTC,
15
May, 2013
Authorities
were assessing damage and searching through rubble on Thursday
afternoon, hoping to find survivors among the twisted metal and
splintered wood of flattened homes.
"This
tornado was a monster," said Hood County Commissioner Steve
Berry. "It's just devastating."
The
tornado, which brought winds of 166-200 miles per hour, was rated an
EF4 by the National Weather Service (NWS), the second-most powerful
level for such a storm, said NWS meteorologist Mark Wiley.
EF4
tornadoes are rare and can blow away a well constructed wood or brick
home, according to weather service ratings.
Granbury,
a town of 8,000 people about 35 miles southwest of Dallas-Fort Worth,
took the hardest hit.
Officials
counted six dead in Hood County, where Granbury is located, said
county spokesman, Tye Bell. Another seven were missing and at least
45 people were injured, with most of the victims coming from the
Rancho Brazos subdivision of approximately 110 mostly single-family
homes.
HID
IN CLOSET
Ronna
Cotten, 38, was home with three of her four children when the sirens
went off. She and the children, ages 14, 12 and 8, hid in a hallway
closet as the twister ripped the roof off their home. When she
emerged with her children after the storm passed, Cotten saw "bodies
everywhere," she said.
"We're
trying to figure out what to do one step at a time," she said.
Frank
Gamez, a construction worker in Granbury, said he found the body of a
friend as he and other people searched the neighborhood after the
tornado hit Wednesday evening.
"We
lost one of our friends. We found him laying on the ground,"
Gamez said.
Texas
Gov. Rick Perry issued a statement saying he was "deeply
saddened" by the deaths, and that state officials were assisting
with local needs.
"The
thoughts of 26 million Texans are with those suffering today,"
Perry said.
The
area hit included 61 homes built by Habitat for Humanity, the charity
said on its website. Habitat for Humanity uses volunteers to build
and repair homes for low-income residents.
Gamez
said one Habitat for Humanity home that was to be officially
presented to a poor family this weekend, was completely destroyed.
"There's
nothing there but concrete slabs," he said.
Angela
Jackson, 47, said her home, which was built by Habitat for Humanity
11 years ago, suffered roof damage and broken windows but was still
standing.
"We've
had high winds before and hail but nothing like this," Jackson
said. "It was a freak storm."
In
nearby Parker County, about 14 homes and farms had severe roof damage
and other structural damage and a few buildings were destroyed, said
Parker County Judge Mark Riley. No injuries or deaths were reported.
Preliminary
reports showed that the National Weather Service issued a tornado
warning for Granbury 26 minutes before the twister struck, according
to Wiley. That is an unusually long lead time as the average warning
time is 10 to 12 minutes, he said.
Until
Wednesday, the tornado season had been unusually mild so far in 2013
after two years of intense activity. Only three people have died in
tornadoes so far in 2013, according to weather service statistics.
The
deadliest tornado year in decades was 2011 when 553 people were
killed, including 161 from a massive tornado that struck Joplin,
Missouri in May that year.
In
March 2012, at least 39 people were killed in a chain of tornadoes
from the Midwest to the Gulf of Mexico. A total of 70 people were
killed in tornadoes last year.
The
tornado season in the United States typically starts in the Gulf
Coast states in the late winter, and then moves north with the
warming weather, peaking around May and trailing off by July.
More
stormy weather is expected later on Thursday in northeast Texas,
southern Arkansas and northern Louisiana, but not in the area of
Texas hit by tornadoes on Wednesday, the weather service said.
Seven
still missing after Texas tornado
Six
people were dead and seven missing after a powerful tornado ripped
through a neighborhood that included housing for the poor in the
north Texas town of Granbury, marking the deadliest severe storm
outbreak in the United States so far this year.
TVNZ,
17
May, 2013
Authorities
were assessing damage and searching through rubble on Thursday
afternoon, hoping to find survivors among the twisted metal and
splintered wood of flattened homes.
"This
tornado was a monster," said Hood County Commissioner Steve
Berry. "It's just devastating."
The
tornado, which brought winds of 166-200 miles per hour, was rated an
EF4 by the National Weather Service (NWS), the second-most powerful
level for such a storm, said NWS meteorologist Mark Wiley.
EF4
tornadoes are rare and can blow away a well constructed wood or brick
home, according to weather service ratings. Granbury, a town of 8,000
people about 56 km southwest of Dallas-Fort Worth, took the hardest
hit.
Officials
counted six dead in Hood County, where Granbury is located, said
county spokesman, Tye Bell. Another seven were missing and at least
45 people were injured, with most of the victims coming from the
Rancho Brazos subdivision of approximately 110 mostly single-family
homes.
'Bodies
everywhere'
Ronna
Cotten, 38, was home with three of her four children when the sirens
went off. She and the children, ages 14, 12 and 8, hid in a hallway
closet as the twister ripped the roof off their home. When she
emerged with her children after the storm passed, Cotten saw "bodies
everywhere," she said.
"We're
trying to figure out what to do one step at a time," she said.
Frank
Gamez, a construction worker in Granbury, said he found the body of a
friend as he and other people searched the neighborhood after the
tornado hit Wednesday evening.
"We
lost one of our friends. We found him laying on the ground,"
Gamez said.
Texas
Gov. Rick Perry issued a statement saying he was "deeply
saddened" by the deaths, and that state officials were assisting
with local needs.
"The
thoughts of 26 million Texans are with those suffering today,"
Perry said. The area hit included 61 homes built by Habitat for
Humanity, the charity said on its website.
Habitat
for Humanity uses volunteers to build and repair homes for low-income
residents. Gamez said one Habitat for Humanity home that was to be
officially presented to a poor family this weekend, was completely
destroyed. "There's nothing there but concrete slabs," he
said.
Angela
Jackson, 47, said her home, which was built by Habitat for Humanity
11 years ago, suffered roof damage and broken windows but was still
standing.
"We've
had high winds before and hail but nothing like this," Jackson
said. "It was a freak storm."
In
nearby Parker County, about 14 homes and farms had severe roof damage
and other structural damage and a few buildings were destroyed, said
Parker County Judge Mark Riley.
No
injuries or deaths were reported.
Preliminary
reports showed that the National Weather Service issued a tornado
warning for Granbury 26 minutes before the twister struck, according
to Wiley.
That
is an unusually long lead time as the average warning time is 10 to
12 minutes, he said.
Until
Wednesday, the tornado season had been unusually mild so far in 2013
after two years of intense activity.
Only
three people have died in tornadoes so far in 2013, according to
weather service statistics. The deadliest tornado year in decades was
2011 when 553 people were killed, including 161 from a massive
tornado that struck Joplin, Missouri in May that year.
In
March 2012, at least 39 people were killed in a chain of tornadoes
from the Midwest to the Gulf of Mexico. A total of 70 people were
killed in tornadoes last year.
The
tornado season in the United States typically starts in the Gulf
Coast states in the late winter, and then moves north with the
warming weather, peaking around May and trailing off by July.
More
stormy weather is expected later on Thursday in northeast Texas,
southern Arkansas and northern Louisiana, but not in the area of
Texas hit by tornadoes on Wednesday, the weather service said.
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