Google Search

For weather information from across the nation, please check out our home site National Weather Outlook. Thanks!

Washington DC Current Conditions

Washington DC Weather Forecast

Washington DC 7 Day Weather Forecast

Washington DC Metro Weather Radar

Showing posts with label Deadly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deadly. Show all posts

Saturday, May 17, 2014

Snowstorms, energy black outs present elevated risk for deadly carbon monoxide poisoning

While avoidable, deadly carbon monoxide poisoning is really a serious and often fatal condition. Large weather occasions, for example snowstorms and high storms that create energy black outs, can result in a rise in the amount of reported deadly carbon monoxide exposures. Scientists from Hartford Hospital in Hartford, Connecticut investigated the hyperlink between these major storms and the increase in deadly carbon monoxide exposure cases. They discovered that portable machines were the most typical supply of deadly carbon monoxide exposure after storms which led to energy deficits vehicle exhaust was the commonest supply of exposure after heavy snowstorms. Their findings are released within the May problem from the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

This Year, 12,136 unintended exposures were reported to U.S. Poison Control Centers. Deadly carbon monoxide is definitely an odor free, without color, and tasteless gas that may eventually get to harmful levels in unventilated areas. Signs and symptoms of deadly carbon monoxide poisoning include head aches, nausea, and lightheadedness. If left without treatment, deadly carbon monoxide exposure can result in severe illness or perhaps dying. Throughout after severe winter months, individuals are in an elevated risk for contact with deadly carbon monoxide due to using alternative warmth sources in their houses and heating vents blocked by snow.

Within this new study, researchers checked out data reported towards the Connecticut Poison Control Center after two storms: a 2011 winter storm that led to common energy loss along with a large snow storm in 2013. As many as 172 patient cases were recognized following the energy loss storm, while 34 cases were recognized following a snow storm. Scientists discovered that most deadly carbon monoxide exposures happened within the very first day of the snow storm, as well as on the 2nd and third times of a energy loss storm. "These results indicate the staffing designs and call agendas from the medical companies active in the management of deadly carbon monoxide-poisoned patients might need to be modified accordingly, in line with the kind of storm expected," states lead investigator Kelly Manley-Arbor, MD, Department of Emergency Medicine, Hartford Hospital.

Throughout a energy loss storm, the most typical causes of deadly carbon monoxide exposure would be the indoor utilization of gas-powered machines, gas heating units and lamps, and charcoal grills. "Sufficient ventilation is an essential component of deadly carbon monoxide poisoning prevention," describes Dr. Manley-Arbor. "Following multiple reviews of deadly carbon monoxide exposures and deaths after energy loss storms, there's been a rise in public health education regarding the significance of staying away from indoor utilization of machines and charcoal grills throughout a storm's aftermath."

Researchers learned that snowstorms present another group of dangers from deadly carbon monoxide exposure. Throughout and carrying out a heavy snow, people could be uncovered to deadly carbon monoxide within their automobiles in addition to their houses. In houses, large snowdrifts can block heating vents, while vehicle tailpipes may become clogged with snow that triggers deadly carbon monoxide to leak into the vehicle.

"Lethal levels of deadly carbon monoxide can build within the passenger compartment of the snow-blocked vehicle, even if your vehicle's home windows are opened up 6 inches," appreciates co-investigator Dadong Li, PhD, Department of Research Administration, Hartford Hospital. "So get a telephone to counsel the general public to look at their automobiles after snowstorms to make sure that the exhaust area is removed of snow, just before beginning the engine. Additionally, people should be advisable to avoid relaxing in running automobiles throughout after snowstorms, unless of course the exhaust area continues to be completely removed of snow, no matter if the home windows are opened up."

Greater understanding of the risks of deadly carbon monoxide exposure has motivated more home owners to set up deadly carbon monoxide sensors, however, they aren't needed countrywide. "Elevated reviews of deadly carbon monoxide poisoning can happen after both snowstorms and energy loss storms," adds Dr. Manley-Arbor. "Enhanced public education or local policy actions concerning using deadly carbon monoxide sensors, especially in the aftermath of storms, might be particularly advantageous in states where using these products isn't mandated legally.Inch


View the original article here

Monday, May 6, 2013

Winds could fan deadly Calif. wildfire

Residents help battle the fire in Murrieta, Calif. Firefighters say it's too soon to determine the gender of the body found in a burned home in the Campo area on Monday. Frank Bellino, The Press-Enterprise/AP

Residents help battle the fire in Murrieta, Calif. Firefighters say it's too soon to determine the gender of the body found in a burned home in the Campo area on Monday.

Frank Bellino, The Press-Enterprise/AP

Residents help battle the fire in Murrieta, Calif. Firefighters say it's too soon to determine the gender of the body found in a burned home in the Campo area on Monday.

CAMPO, Calif. (AP) â?? A fire that killed an elderly man who refused to evacuate and burned 20 homes in rural San Diego County was smoldering Tuesday, but gusty afternoon winds could push it back to life, authorities said.

Nearly 1,000 firefighters planned an all-out effort to surround the blaze, which continued to threaten about 25 homes in the rural community of Tierra del Sol near the U.S.-Mexican border, said fire spokesman Andy Menshek. Residents of two other small communities were allowed to return home earlier.

About 80 residents remained under evacuation orders.

"That is the one remaining evacuated area," Menshek said. "That's out highest priority today â?¦ we have propane tanks, downed power lines and a lot of hotspots to mop up."

The fire, which has burned nearly 4 1/2 square miles of hilly brush land since Sunday, was 55 percent contained.

Although no active flame was showing, winds began picking up Tuesday morning and gusts of up to 40 mph could hit in the afternoon, Menshek said.

"If we get one ember over the line, the fire could take off," he said.

On Monday, the body of an elderly man was retrieved from a burned home in Tierra del Sol. Neighbors reported the man missing when they saw his only vehicle parked at the home, authorities said. His identity was not immediately released, but neighbors told U-T San Diego he was 82 and had one leg.

Reverse 911 calls notifying homeowners of the evacuation order were made by the county sheriff's department. Neighbors said the man decided to remain.

"He felt that he was going to be OK if he stayed," sheriff's Lt. Rose Kurupas told the newspaper.

"He chose to stay and that's sad," Menshek said. "That's why we issue these evacuations."

Other blazes in the West remained active, blanketing some communities in eastern Washington state with smoke. The air quality in many Wenatchee and Cashmere areas was deemed either "hazardous" or "unhealthy" by state officials.

Authorities there updated the sizes of two of the state's largest fires after more accurate mapping and burnouts to create fire lines, officials said. The Wenatchee complex of fires was reported at 82 square miles, while the Table Mountain fire had burned nearly 57 square miles.

Crews also gained ground on a 5 1/2-square-mile fire in Montana's Musselshell County, allowing residents to return to about 50 homes southeast of Roundup. That blaze was human-caused and under investigation.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.For more information about reprints & permissions, visit our FAQ's. To report corrections and clarifications, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification. To view our corrections, go to corrections.usatoday.com.

View the original article here

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Winds could fan deadly Calif. wildfire

Residents help battle the fire in Murrieta, Calif. Firefighters say it's too soon to determine the gender of the body found in a burned home in the Campo area on Monday. Frank Bellino, The Press-Enterprise/AP

Residents help battle the fire in Murrieta, Calif. Firefighters say it's too soon to determine the gender of the body found in a burned home in the Campo area on Monday.

Frank Bellino, The Press-Enterprise/AP

Residents help battle the fire in Murrieta, Calif. Firefighters say it's too soon to determine the gender of the body found in a burned home in the Campo area on Monday.

CAMPO, Calif. (AP) â?? A fire that killed an elderly man who refused to evacuate and burned 20 homes in rural San Diego County was smoldering Tuesday, but gusty afternoon winds could push it back to life, authorities said.

Nearly 1,000 firefighters planned an all-out effort to surround the blaze, which continued to threaten about 25 homes in the rural community of Tierra del Sol near the U.S.-Mexican border, said fire spokesman Andy Menshek. Residents of two other small communities were allowed to return home earlier.

About 80 residents remained under evacuation orders.

"That is the one remaining evacuated area," Menshek said. "That's out highest priority today â?¦ we have propane tanks, downed power lines and a lot of hotspots to mop up."

The fire, which has burned nearly 4 1/2 square miles of hilly brush land since Sunday, was 55 percent contained.

Although no active flame was showing, winds began picking up Tuesday morning and gusts of up to 40 mph could hit in the afternoon, Menshek said.

"If we get one ember over the line, the fire could take off," he said.

On Monday, the body of an elderly man was retrieved from a burned home in Tierra del Sol. Neighbors reported the man missing when they saw his only vehicle parked at the home, authorities said. His identity was not immediately released, but neighbors told U-T San Diego he was 82 and had one leg.

Reverse 911 calls notifying homeowners of the evacuation order were made by the county sheriff's department. Neighbors said the man decided to remain.

"He felt that he was going to be OK if he stayed," sheriff's Lt. Rose Kurupas told the newspaper.

"He chose to stay and that's sad," Menshek said. "That's why we issue these evacuations."

Other blazes in the West remained active, blanketing some communities in eastern Washington state with smoke. The air quality in many Wenatchee and Cashmere areas was deemed either "hazardous" or "unhealthy" by state officials.

Authorities there updated the sizes of two of the state's largest fires after more accurate mapping and burnouts to create fire lines, officials said. The Wenatchee complex of fires was reported at 82 square miles, while the Table Mountain fire had burned nearly 57 square miles.

Crews also gained ground on a 5 1/2-square-mile fire in Montana's Musselshell County, allowing residents to return to about 50 homes southeast of Roundup. That blaze was human-caused and under investigation.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.For more information about reprints & permissions, visit our FAQ's. To report corrections and clarifications, contact Standards Editor Brent Jones. For publication consideration in the newspaper, send comments to letters@usatoday.com. Include name, phone number, city and state for verification. To view our corrections, go to corrections.usatoday.com.

View the original article here

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Calm weather offers respite after deadly storms

LONDON, Kentucky (Reuters) - Calm weather gave dazed residents of storm-wracked U.S. towns a respite on Sunday as they dug out from a chain of tornadoes that cut a swath of destruction from the Midwest to the Gulf of Mexico, killing 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 21 people in Kentucky, 13 in neighboring Indiana, three in Ohio and one in Alabama, officials said. Georgia also reported a storm-related death.

Forecasters said more trouble was headed for the hardest hit areas of Indiana and Kentucky on Sunday night, when up to three inches of rain and snow were expected to add to the misery for hundreds of residents whose homes were destroyed.

"It's very light right now, but the coverage and intensity of the precipitation is expected to increase later on this afternoon and into the evening," said Kurt Van Speybroeck of the National Weather Service.

The fast-moving tornadoes that hit on Friday, numbering at least 30, came on top of severe weather earlier in the week in the Midwest and brought the overall death toll from the unseasonably early storms to at least 52 people.

On Sunday, a toddler who had become a symbol of hope amid destruction after she was found alive in an Indiana field died of her injuries, state police said. The tornado that killed Angel Babcock also claimed the lives of her parents and her two siblings.

Angel, who was reported to be 14 months old, had been in critical condition in a Kentucky hospital since Friday, when she was rescued after a tornado hit her family's mobile home in New Pekin, Indiana.

The girl's grandfather, Jack Brough, had earlier told the Louisville Courier-Journal that her condition was extremely critical, and asked for prayers. Angel's family of five were the only people killed in Washington County, one of the hardest hit areas of the state.

The 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.

SECURITY CONCERNS

National Guard troops manned checkpoints on roads and outside towns, and were checking identity documents of those seeking to enter hard hit areas of Indiana and Kentucky following reports of looting. Long lines of cars waited at the entrances to some towns.

As recently as Sunday afternoon, police stopped a vehicle on a back road that was trying to leave a home with a load full of stolen copper, Albert Hale, the emergency manager for Kentucky's Laurel County said.

Indiana's hard-hit Clark County, where a powerful EF-4 tornado hit the town of Henryville, imposed a nighttime curfew, and Kentucky's Governor Steve Beshear on Sunday urged spectators and unsolicited volunteers to stay out of the way so emergency responders could do their jobs.

Beshear told reporters the storm had caused at least $5.8 million in property damage. He described the scene in the hard-hit town of West Liberty as one of "total devastation" and signed an executive order barring price gouging for food and other necessities.

"It looked like a bomb had been dropped in the middle of town," he said of West Liberty. "Buildings had the walls standing and the roof gone. It was a terrible sight. It's going to be a long, long time to get that town on its feet."

About 400 National Guard troops have been dispatched around the state to maintain order.

Indiana State Police Sergeant Jerry Gooden said the focus in southern Indiana had turned from search and rescue to securing the area and clearing the way for volunteers, who he said may be allowed in on Monday.

"We're guarding property so people don't come in and steal what little people do have left," Gooden said. "We've got a boatload of volunteers we can't let in yet because of the dangers from the electric lines and gas lines being there. It's a tedious process because each home's got a gas line, but they're getting it done."

President Barack Obama called the governors of Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky to offer condolences and assure them the federal government was ready to help if needed. Kentucky's Beshear said he would request a federal disaster declaration.

Meanwhile, clean-up crews worked to move downed power lines and clear debris, and residents began putting tarps over torn apart homes to prevent further damage. The more fortunate brought donations including diapers, blankets and food to area churches.

Residents in the affluent Kentucky town of London, in a county near the Tennessee border that reported five deaths, were eager to get back to some degree of normal life.

Willa Reynolds greeted dozens of attendees at the front entrance of Grace Fellowship Church, many wiping snow flakes from their clothes as they walked in.

"It's good to see you," Reynolds said to one person. "It's good to see every single person who walks through the door after the week we had."

(Additonal reporting by Karen Brooks, Mary Slosson and Barbara Goldberg; Writing by Cynthia Johnston; Editing by Peter Bohan)


View the original article here

Thursday, January 26, 2012

January Tornadoes Turn Deadly in Alabama (ContributorNetwork)

A severe line of storms that started in Arkansas and Missouri moved eastward, leaving a trail of destruction from high winds and tornadoes in the Midwest and the South. According to MSNBC, at least three people are dead in Alabama, and homes and businesses were destroyed in several states and thousands without power late Sunday and early Monday.

* The Storm Prediction Center of the National Weather Service posted preliminary data from the overnight storms and it included 22 tornado reports.

* In Arkansas, the SPC reported tornadoes were spotted near Fordyce, Coy, Slovak, Lodge Corner, DeWitt and Burks. The counties were Cleveland, Dallas, Lonoke, Prairie, Arkansas and Crittendon.

* In Mississippi, tornadoes were spotted near Trebloc and Lauderdale.

* In Tennessee, there was a possible tornado report in Dickson.

* MSNBC reported that in Alabama, the three deaths occurred near Birmingham. Center Point was hit especially hard. Tuscaloosa, which saw death and destruction from tornadoes in April, suffered damage.

* Accuweather.com reported a fourth fatality had occurred in Alabama.

* Accuweather also reported damage in the Paradise Valley, Millbrook and Clanton areas in Alabama. In Clanton, a tornado is believed to be behind the destruction of a radio station and transmission tower. A report from Millbrook stated winds knocked down trees and power lines and tore apart fences and metal buildings.

* There were reports of severe damage, downed trees, snapped power lines and debris blocking roads in several areas around Alabama, Arkansas, Missouri, Tennessee, Mississippi, Kentucky, Illinois and Indiana. The SPC received numerous reports of high winds and wind damage, lightning and power outages across parts of these states.

* In Arkansas and Tennessee, there were reports of tractor-trailers and signs blown over on Interstates, according to the SPC.

* Large hail was reported to the SPC from several states, with multiple reports of quarter-sized hail in Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois and Kentucky. Some locations reported hail that was half-dollar in size and larger. There was a report of hail the size of a hen's egg in Calloway County, Ky., and at least one report of hail the size of softballs in Jefferson County, Ark.

* Following overnight high winds, the ferry at Cave-in-Rock, Ill., was closed temporarily, as reported by WPSD-TV. The ferry transports travelers the Ohio River between Illinois and Kentucky but high winds that continue in the region on the heels of Sunday night's storm system are still creating dangerous conditions in the area and the decision was made to close the ferry until weather conditions improve.

Tammy Lee Morris is certified as a Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) member and is a trained Skywarn Stormspotter through the National Weather Service. She has received interpretive training regarding the New Madrid Seismic Zone through EarthScope -- a program of the National Science Foundation. She researches and writes about earthquakes, volcanoes, tornadoes, weather and other natural phenomena.


View the original article here

Monday, August 22, 2011

Storms bring deadly flood to Pittsburgh; tornado hits Wisconsin (Reuters)

PITTSBURGH (Reuters) – Severe storms were expected in the Midwest on Saturday and then to add to weekend weather woes in the Northeast, where flash flooding killed at least three people in Pittsburgh on Friday.

Heavy rains submerged cars in flood water that was nine feet deep in places in Pittsburgh, authorities said.

The three victims, identified as a woman and two children, died after their vehicle was pinned against a tree on Washington Boulevard near the Allegheny River.

They were unable to escape, Michael Huss, the city's public safety director, said at a news conference late Friday.

"We have crews that are continuing to search," he said.

Some 18 cars were stranded in the flooding and 11 people had to be rescued, according to local media reports.

Rescue crews used inflatable rafts to reach stranded drivers. Power was out to 8,400 customers.

Earlier, the National Weather Service had issued a flash flood watch for Allegheny County as storms pounded the area, bringing three to four inches of rain, according to the NWS.

Nearly half of all flood fatalities are vehicle related, the NWS warned early Saturday morning in a flood advisory.

"As little as six inches of water will cause you to lose control of your vehicle," the NWS stated. "Two feet of water will carry most vehicles away."

Saturday no active flash flood warnings were in effect from the National Weather Service, but meteorologists for The Weather Channel forecast more storms from the Great Lakes to the Central Plains for the day and into the night.

One man died as storms and a suspected tornado roared across northern Wisconsin on Friday night, cutting off power to around 2,000 homes, the Wisconsin Division of Emergency Management said.

The man was staying in a rented trailer home in the path of the storm, which downed trees in a mile-long swath just north of Wausaukee, 65 miles north of Green Bay, a Marinette County sheriff's spokesman said.

"At around 5 p.m. we had an apparent tornado in the Wausaukee area. We have one fatality," said Lori Getter, spokeswoman for the Wisconsin Division of Emergency Management. She identified the person who died as a middle-aged man.

Friday's storm came three months after a massive tornado devastated Joplin, Missouri, killing 155 people in the deadliest tornado to hit the United States in over 60 years.

Damaging winds and hail were the primary threats for cities like St. Louis, Detroit and Chicago on Saturday, according to weather.com.

Saturday morning, the NWS Doppler radar indicated a fast-moving thunderstorm near Chicago capable of creating "half dollar sized hail," "damaging winds in excess of 60 mph," "deadly lightning," and "very heavy rain."

Saturday's thunderstorm threat will shift to the Northeast Sunday.

(Additional reporting by John Rondy in Milwaukee and Cynthia Johnston in Las Vegas; Writing by Molly O'Toole; Editing by Jerry Norton)


View the original article here

Friday, June 17, 2011

Deadly Fungal Infection Endangers Joplin Tornado Victims (ContributorNetwork)

On top of the devastating tornado which struck Joplin, Mo., May 22, victims and rescue workers now face another threat: a deadly fungus called zygomycosis (Mucormycosis). Several tornado victims would have survived if not for this fungal infection.

According to the National Institute of Health, zygomycosis is a common fungus found in soil and rotting vegetation. We are surrounded by it; most healthy people are not affected by the fungus. However, people with compromised immune systems and trauma victims are at risk for infection from zygomycosis. Children and pregnant women are always at special risk for infection and should be watched closely.

There are several forms of zygomycosis infections: sinus, lung, gastrointestinal and kidney. Symptoms occurring in Joplin primarily occur in the sinuses: sinus congestion and pain, rhinitis (runny nose), headache, nasal irritation, fever, cough, and abdominal pain. Any of these symptoms in injury victims should be reported immediately.

Zygomycosis infection has occurred in other disaster sites, like after the 2004 tsunami. Fungal infection is linked to natural disasters in several ways. First, in weather-related disasters, the landscape is damaged, releasing more of the fungus into the atmosphere.

Next, after a disaster, large areas of trees and plants are laid to waste. In a tornado or earthquake, terrain is ripped up. In a tsunami or hurricane, crops are destroyed and left to rot by flood waters. Also, injured farmers aren't able to tend to crops properly after a tornado or hurricane. All this creates the rotting vegetation that zygomycosis feeds on.

Disasters leave many normally healthy people with compromised immune systems. The emotional trauma of losing loved ones, homes and property is enough to make victims more susceptible to illness. If they have been injured, tornado victims are exponentially more at-risk for illnesses that healthy people could ward off.

Also, disaster survivors with medical conditions that existed before the tornado (diabetes, organ transplant, cancer, chronic drug or steroid use) are at additional risk. The Joplin tornado struck St. John's Regional Medical Center, leaving many patients and staff injured. These people are in a high-risk group.

Rescue workers are in danger of infection from zygomycosis. Poor sanitation is one of the most common disaster after-effects. Ruptured water and sewer lines and damaged power lines create unhealthy masses of bacteria and spread infection. As a fungus, zygomycosis clings to damaged surfaces, such as broken boards and protruding nails. If rescue workers injure themselves, they are at greater risk for infection.

How can we prevent the spread of zygomycosis and other infections among disaster workers? Wear protective clothing: face masks, heavy gloves, long sleeved shirts, work pants and safety goggles. Avoid direct contact with damaged structures, and use equipment rather than your bare hands to handle debris. Be sure you are up-to-date on immunizations.

Marilisa Kinney Sachteleben writes from 22 years parenting four children and 25 teaching K-8, special needs, adult education and homeschool.


View the original article here

Thursday, June 16, 2011

CDC Studying Deadly Fungus After Joplin, Mo., Tornado (ContributorNetwork)

The Centers for Disease Control has gotten involved in a mysterious case of a fungal infection known as mucormycosis in victims of the Joplin, Mo., tornado. As many as three people have had severe enough infections to have possibly died from a rare form of fungus after receiving injuries due to the massive twister.

Death rates are as high as 30 percent for people who have the fungus spread through their blood. The rate goes as high as 50 percent in those who inhale the spores.

Some of the injured received multiple injuries with bleeding. The Springfield News-Leader reports eight people have been diagnosed with massive fungal infections, three of whom have died. Samples are being sent to the CDC for further tests.

The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services issued a health advisory, four days after the Greene County (Mo.) Health Department published a memo to health professionals. The aggressive fungus causes soft tissue to die in extreme cases.

The advisory states anyone injured in the tornado with multiple lacerations, pneumonia, severe respiratory problems and kidney issues should be watched very carefully for signs of mycosis. So far, there have been no cases attributed to air, food or water. So far, cases of the fungal infection are limited to those with cuts and underlying health problems.

The state also says the infections do not travel from human to human.

The National Institutes of Health states people with weakened immune systems are most susceptible to this rare form of mycosis. Mild symptoms include inflammation, coughing, fever and headache. More severe symptoms include blindness, blood clotting and even death.

Dr. Benjamin Park of the CDC told the Associated Press this type of outbreak is rare. Most major hospitals only see one or two cases a year.

More than 1,000 people were injured and 151 people killed when a massive EF5 tornado destroyed 30 percent of Joplin May 22. Some of the wounded are still in hospitals nearly three weeks after the tornado. Health officials are still facing problems even though the city has moved to clean up mode after the initial crisis waned.

If anyone has experienced any unusual symptoms, they should see a doctor immediate. Because most cases have been attributed to catching the fungus through the bloodstream, any volunteers with exposed cuts should be extremely careful.

Signs of skin discoloration appear five to 10 days after exposure to the fungus. This kind of symptom occurs when a wound near the skin becomes infected.

William Browning, a lifelong Missouri resident, writes about local and state issues for the Yahoo! Contributor Network. Born in St. Louis, Browning earned his bachelor's degree in English from the University of Missouri. He currently resides in Branson.


View the original article here

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Mass. towns look to rebuild after deadly tornadoes (AP)

By RUSSELL CONTRERAS, DAVID COLLINS and STEPHEN SINGER, Associated Press Russell Contreras, David Collins And Stephen Singer, Associated Press – Fri Jun 3, 3:31 am ET

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. – A number of Massachusetts communities are confronting the long and painful task of rebuilding shattered lives and livelihoods Friday, just days after three deadly tornadoes flattened more than 200 homes, killed at least three people and scattered debris across the state.

Gov. Deval Patrick said at least 19 communities reported damage from the violent storms, which came with fair warning, in an area of the country that rarely sees such severe twisters that destroyed homes, peeled-off roofs and the toppled steeple of a 140-year-old church.

"Some of the damage was particularly profound," Patrick said Thursday.

"In West Springfield, for example, they are reporting 88 that are total losses; in Springfield itself, about 35; in Monson 77 total losses and counting," Patrick said. "Monson was one of the communities most significantly hit."

If the National Weather Service agrees Wednesday's three deaths are tornado-related, it would bring the year's U.S. toll to 522 and make this year the deadliest for tornadoes since 1950. The highest recorded toll was 519 in 1953; four deaths from Joplin, Mo., that were added Thursday tied the record. There were deadlier years before 1950, but those counts were based on estimates.

Tornadoes are not unheard of in New England — the downtown of Connecticut's largest city was devastated by one last June — so many people heeded warnings. That didn't guarantee their survival; among the dead was a mother who shielded her teenage daughter as they huddled in a bathtub.

But in many cases, doing the right thing — quickly — helped save lives.

Karen Irla, 50, was leaving Adams Hometown Market in the picturesque village of Monson when she heard children on their bicycles yelling, "Look at that tornado!"

"I screamed and I screamed and I screamed, and that's why I have no voice today," said Irla, who drove to a nearby senior center and waited until the storm passed.

Inside the market, produce manager Frank Calabrese made a quick decision that helped keep customers and employees from coming to harm.

In a move recalling a famous video from the recent deadly tornado in Missouri that documented shoppers' terrifying moments inside a convenience store cooler, Calabrese herded them into a walk-in freezer, where six to eight endless minutes passed while the building shook and windows shattered.

"What else are we going to do?" he said. "We sat inside and waited it out."

No one in the store suffered a scratch.

The storms hit as many people headed home from work Wednesday, paralyzing motorists who could see the twister coming at them.

A fixed television camera caught dramatic images of a debris-filled tunnel cloud crossing the Connecticut River and slamming into Springfield, a working-class city of about 140,000 residents, where it cut a swath of destruction 10 blocks wide in some spots. The city is home to the Basketball Hall of Fame, which was spared damage.

Michael Valentin, 29, said he was eating at a soup kitchen near downtown when he started hearing thunder and went outside.

"All this was chaos," he said. "It was like a mad wind twisting. It was destroying everything. Cars were being smashed against walls. Pieces of wood and trees were flying in the air."

Debbie Perkins, 30, was filling up a small backyard swimming pool for some children when they spotted the funnel. They ran into the home and huddled in the basement.

"The kids, they were all screaming and crying," Perkins said. Unlike many of her neighbors, she escaped without damage to her home.

Among the injured in Springfield was a prosecutor struck in the head by debris while walking to her car; she is expected to survive, but her name was not released.

The Hampden County district attorney, Mark Mastroianni, said he barely escaped injury himself when plate glass windows shattered and blew into his office and a conference room.

"People started to scream, `Get away from the windows,' and as I was just turning to run, the glass window just came flying in," he said.

Fabiola Guerrero wept Thursday as she returned to the wreckage of her family's home, which collapsed and crushed to death her 39-year-old mother, Angelica, as she sheltered a younger daughter in a bathtub. Guerrero said her sister was trapped for two hours before being rescued.

Guerrero said her mother always said she would die for her daughter.

"She was an amazing woman," she said.

The devastation was repeated in town after town around Springfield. Some of the most severe damage was in Monson, about 15 miles away, where homes were leveled and a historic church was badly damaged.

"This isn't supposed to happen here," Sen. John Kerry said after touring the damage in Monson, usually a quiet mountain hamlet about 90 miles west of Boston.

The toppled steeple of the First Church of Monson — founded in 1762 and rebuilt in 1873 — was a symbol of the heartbreak many residents were feeling. But townspeople were relieved that no one in the town of fewer than 10,000 was killed — and were determined to rebuild.

Gov. Patrick said he was moved by gestures of goodwill.

A woman in Monson received a phone call from someone in the Boston suburb of Milton — the governor's hometown — who had recovered her checkbook register after the ferocious winds apparently carried it 90 miles.

He also addressed the death of the West Springfield woman who died while saving her daughter's life by covering her in the bathtub.

"I'm a dad, and I understand a mom or dad would do anything to save their child," Patrick said.

Authorities initially believed at least four people died but later determined that a heart attack death in Springfield was likely unrelated to the storms. A man died when a tree struck a van in West Springfield, and another person died in Brimfield, though authorities have not released details.

The governor, who declared a state of emergency allowing officials to sidestep usual regulations to provide quick relief, pledged that the state would throw all its resources behind recovery and that federal disaster assistance would be sought.

"For those who are feeling, quite understandably, that they can't imagine what a better tomorrow would look like, I want to assure that we are working to get to that better tomorrow," he said.

Massachusetts public health officials said about 200 people sought treatment for storm related-injuries.

Dr. Reginald Alouidor, a surgeon heading the trauma teams at Baystate Medical Center in Springfield, said the injured at his hospital ranged in age from 2 to their mid-60s, with many suffering broken bones or other injuries from wind-driven debris.

Seven remained at the hospital Thursday, including a woman whose liver was lacerated when a building collapsed on her.

Police and National Guard troops went door to door in Springfield to check for any residents who were injured or otherwise needed help. The police chief confirmed reports of looting and other crimes, but no arrests were made.

Tens of thousands remained without power in the region.

Given the extent of damage, Patrick, who joined Kerry and Sen. Scott Brown for an aerial tour of the devastation, said it was remarkable there weren't more deaths.

While two or three tornadoes hit Massachusetts on average every year, they're usually weak and rarely strike heavily populated areas.

That may explain why the twisters caught people by surprise, said Stephen Frasier, a University of Massachusetts professor who has chased tornadoes across the Great Plains.

"Two things happened: This was bigger than the average tornado that hits Massachusetts that usually just knocks over a tree or something, and of course, it hit a populated area," Frasier said.

Tornado watches and warnings had been posted Wednesday by the National Weather Service and were broadcast by radio and TV stations, "but people just don't react to it here the way they do in other regions of the country," he said.

Most Massachusetts communities also don't have warning sirens like in the South and Plains, where people know exactly what they mean and are trained in grade school on how to react. Where sirens do exist, he said, New Englanders often treat them with curiosity rather than as a nudge to seek shelter.

In 1995, three people were killed by a tornado in the small town of Great Barrington, Mass., along the New York border. Last year's tornado in Bridgeport, Conn., heavily damaged buildings but killed no one.

On June 9, 1953, a monster tornado sliced through Worcester and other central Massachusetts communities, killing 94 people and making it one of the deadliest single tornadoes in U.S. history.

___

Collins reported from West Springfield and Singer from Brimfield. Contributing were Associated Press writers Stephanie Reitz in Hartford, Conn.; and Denise Lavoie, Mark Pratt, Bob Salsberg, Sylvia Wingfield and Rodrique Ngowi in Boston.


View the original article here

Human toll of deadly tornado cuts deep in Joplin (AP)

JOPLIN, Mo. – They were regular churchgoers, devoted parents, seniors in their retirement years and children with untold promise.

Some gave their lives to save strangers, thrust by circumstance and human instinct into the role of hero. Others faced a parent's worst fear, losing their lives while also failing to protect their children from death.

Few outside the town of about 50,000 will recognize the names of the dead. But Joplin's close-knit community lost a staggering array of human capital in the May 22 tornado, including seniors who were the town's history and young people who were its future. Some lived their lives ordinarily, only to be defined in their final moments by breathtaking courage.

"I don't know how you put it in context," said Ron Sampson, executive director of Joplin Workshop Inc., where three employees — lifelong friends with Down syndrome — died when their Iowa Street home was destroyed. "Between the physical destruction and the loss of life, it's so overwhelming. Everybody is still in a fog."

Thirteen children died, including several students at Joplin High School, which was flattened. Two pairs of siblings were killed, and five children perished alongside a parent who also died.

Familiar faces at the cell phone store and 15th Street Walmart, three Elks Lodge members who attended weekly Bingo games, and three Harmony Heights Baptist Church worshippers didn't survive the Sunday afternoon twister, the nation's deadliest single tornado in six decades.

Some were praised by name by Barack Obama in a presidential visit one week later, while others died anonymously. Still more continue on in the virtual world, their memories perpetuated in YouTube and Facebook tributes.

Among them was 18-year-old Will Norton, whose story became widely known after it was learned the tornado, carrying 200 mph winds, pulled him out through his SUV's sunroof as he drove home from graduation. His funeral, scheduled for Sunday, figures to dwell not on the way he died but on the unusual way he lived: traveling the world, unlike other Joplin teens.

His family's travel agency allowed Norton to take to the skies. He ultimately would visit 15 countries in Europe and Africa. He became a private pilot like his father and uncle. He was headed to Southern California with plans to study film production at Chapman University and dreams of making movies in Hollywood. He honed his chops on YouTube, gaining thousands of followers as "willdabeast8888," a nod to both his first name and the African antelope he saw abroad.

His father, who was in the passenger seat as the tornado bore down, remains hospitalized with broken ribs, a compressed spine, a rod in his left leg, a compound fracture of his arm and other serious injuries — but plans to attend his son's funeral.

Will "really believed in doing good. He's kind of the face of hope," said his aunt, Tracey Presslor. "But it's not about Will. It's about all the survivors, and all the people who lost their homes or their loved ones."

The storm was especially deadly for the aged. More than a third of those who died were 65 or older, including at least 10 in the Greenbriar nursing home. Neighbors told of hearing screams when the funnel smashed the building and sent bodies airborne.

Some victims have become known for their final moments. Christopher Don Lucas, 27, worked on a Navy submarine until a back injury at sea forced him into civilian life two years ago. A father of two with a pregnant fiancee, the Pizza Hut manager rushed the other employees and at least a dozen customers into the restaurant's walk-in freezer as the half-mile-wide tornado approached.

As the winds whipped through the store, Lucas grabbed a bungee cord to keep the freezer door shut. "He just started pulling with all his might," said his father, Terry Lucas.

Co-worker Daniel Fluharty grabbed Lucas by the waist. Waitress Kayleigh Savannah Teal, 16, held on to her manager's leg. The winds flung open the freezer, throwing the three workers 20 to 30 feet. Fluharty survived; Lucas and Teal did not. "He went out facing the tornado head-on," Terry Lucas said. "He didn't flinch."

Miles "Dean" Wells was also ex-military, a master electrician who worked at Home Depot and cared for a homebound wife with a severe muscular disease. Wells, 59, died while guiding an estimated 40 to 50 customers and employees to the back of the store for safety; a prefab concrete wall collapsed on him. Like Lucas, Wells was singled out by President Obama at a Joplin memorial service one week later.

"In the face of winds that showed no mercy, no regard for human life, that did not discriminate by race or faith or background, it was ordinary people, swiftly tested, who said, `I'm willing to die right now so that someone else might live,'" the president said.

Wells sang in the choir at First Christian Church in Webb City. In recent years, he mastered the art of whistling, recording two CDs with a third loaded on his computer, awaiting his final touches.

"His whistling sounded like a flute," his daughter DeAnna Mancini said. "He's singing in heaven now."


View the original article here

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Alabama residents cope with stress after deadly storms (Reuters)

TUSCALOOSA, Ala (Reuters) – Emeel Salem Jr. cried as he drove through Tuscaloosa on Saturday for the first time since the April 27 tornado ravaged the Alabama town.

"I'm missing turns because the landmarks that used to be there aren't there," said Salem, a University of Alabama alumnus who plays minor league baseball for the Tampa Bay Rays organization.

The Forest Lake home he rented during the off-season was gone. Where the home once stood, he could see Druid City Hospital, a view he didn't have before the storm.

"I knew it would hit me hard," he said. "I didn't realize I'd be overcome with emotions."

Salem said he wasn't worried about himself, but about fellow residents who lost everything.

It's a common response known as secondary traumatic stress or compassion fatigue, said Karla D. Carmichael, an assistant professor of counselor education at the University of Alabama.

Many of the state's residents are dealing with similar emotions in the storms' wake, and mental health experts are taking action to help.

The Alabama Department of Mental Health and the Federal Emergency Management Agency have partnered to activate Project Rebound, a federally funded program agencies use to assist residents when a natural disaster occurs.

Teams of counselors are on the ground helping residents in hard-hit areas, and the state will be able to hire more counselors for community outreach and educational services with FEMA's help, said John Ziegler, director of the public information office for the state's mental health department.

The state will open a call center to provide free crisis counseling as soon as counselors are hired and trained, he said.

"It's later, after the emergency crisis, that people begin to feel the weight of their emotions, and their loss and their grief," Ziegler said.

Roughly two-thirds of Alabama was ravaged by tornadoes on April 27. More than 230 residents died, including 43 in Tuscaloosa alone.

CHANGED LANDSCAPE FUELS STRESS

Though many of Tuscaloosa's 95,000 residents didn't lose a home or a relative, they have seen the devastation and felt the loss of neighborhoods, businesses and their sense of security.

Residents can no longer purchase craft supplies at Hobby Lobby, shop for discounted items at Big Lots, have a burger at Milo's or pick up coffee at Krispy Kreme Doughnuts. All those businesses were destroyed in the storm.

"Everybody in Tuscaloosa potentially has secondary traumatic stress to some degree or another," Carmichael said. "There's going to be an increase in substance abuse, compulsive behavior, over-spending, over-eating, gambling, addiction."

Children are not immune from the destruction.

The city's Chuck E. Cheese's restaurant was leveled during the storm. In the days following the tornado, Carmichael talked with kindergartners and first-graders who knew the Chuck E. Cheese character lived there and wanted to know where he had gone and whether he was okay.

"Chuck E. was taken care of just like everybody else," Carmichael told the schoolchildren. "Chuck E. has a new home. He is staying with friends until they build Chuck E. Cheese's back."

Alabamians who survived the tornadoes may experience depression, guilt, difficulty sleeping, fatigue, nightmares or extra worry in the wake of the disaster, experts said.

The Family Counseling Service in Tuscaloosa has been offering free counseling since the tornado and is now seeing residents come in for treatment.

At first, they feel shock and disbelief, followed by anger and resentment. There will be a sense of loss of what used to be before reaching the stage of acceptance, said Larry Deavers, the center's executive director.

There will be progression and regression as the city recovers, and it is normal for residents to experience different degrees of those stages, he said.

"It doesn't mean you can wrap a bow around it and be done with it," Deavers said. "That's just the way humans are developed and the way we process loss."

"The intensity of those emotions right now is temporary. The key is to allow one another to talk or not to talk."

(Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Jerry Norton)


View the original article here

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Joplin Tornado Videos: Five Looks at the Deadly Missouri Storm (ContributorNetwork)

JOPLIN, Mo. -- I drove from Branson, in southern Missouri, to Joplin to check on my sister-in-law and her family on Sunday. We arrived in Joplin around 8 p.m. to help my wife's family, who live south of town. Everyone in my family is OK after the devastating storm.

We saw the aftermath. But it was local media and storm chasers who captured the deadly tornado in action and on video. Here are some of the initial videos that show the massive tornado as it hit Joplin.

KSN -- Watch

Local station KSN was broadcasting live as the tornado sirens sounded and the storm hit. A camera mounted on the tower captured the scene from a bird's-eye view. Someone in their home recorded the event unfolding on television from their living room.

There are two things notable about the television station coverage. First, initially the weather man at the station said the flashes of light may have been caused by lightning. He quickly changed his tone as the camera picked up electrical transformers blowing out. Second, viewers could see the tornado increasing in size as the camera followed it. Everyone in the studio is heard saying "take cover right now!"

Unfortunately, the girl on the live broadcast didn't help. Toward the end of the video, she said "I don't think it's going to hit our station, but take cover anyways."

Storm Chasers -- Watch

This second video recounts the formation of the tornado as it started and is perhaps the best video of the massive funnel. The life of the tornado looks innocent enough as it is very skinny and appears to be out in the countryside away from houses. But then the tornado gets very wide and thick in what seems like an instant.

The tornado chasers also surveyed part of the damage immediately following the tornado traveling down one of the main streets of Joplin. It's interesting, in a frightening way, to compare this video on the ground to the one from the television tower in the air to see the tornado from both perspectives.

First Person Video: Taking Shelter -- Watch

One man captured five minutes of video from residents taking shelter at a local convenience store in the heart of the destruction zone. If you truly want to know what it's like to be terrified in a tornado, this video is the one to watch.

It's dark in the back of the convenience store. You can hear children whimpering and crying as their mom tries to comfort them. Then, after a minute, you can see lightning flashes from outside the glass window. The manager tells everyone to get down and low to the ground.

Suddenly, you hear wind picking up at about two minutes and 10 seconds into the video. Then the screaming and praying ensues. Less than a minute later, all that is heard is a massive roar of wind. At the very end, the video cuts to a scene that looks like part of the roof that had collapsed into the building.

Tornado Alley Video -- Watch

Storm chasers Jeff and Kathryn Piotrowski were taking video in Joplin as the tornado roared through town. The debris field in the middle of the tornado is fairly well defined and intense. All I could think about when I saw the wood and dust gathering in the tornado was that those were people's homes.

YouTube: RevolutionNo1 -- Watch

These people in a vehicle aired 12 minutes of tornado video on YouTube. Warning, there are some strong curse words used in the video. The footage starts on North Rangeline near the Northpark Mall and the vehicle proceeds to the south. The videographer is pointing the camera to the west -- the initial spot of the twister.

They pass the Toys "R" Us and proceed into the areas hardest hit by the storm before it passes. About four minutes into the video, the passenger seat person named Roger comments on the light not turning green at Rangeline and 20th. The driver suggests taking shelter in the Home Depot across the street.

Despite the fact that it's around 5:30 p.m. in the early evening and the sun should be shining brightly, the view to the west is pitch black as the twister advances. At the 5:40 mark of the video, the horizontal rain is upon the vehicle and one passenger says just floor it and get out of here. The engine revs up. At about seven minutes, they debate taking shelter or to get on Interstate 44 and outrun the tornado as hail pelts the car.

Just after nine minutes, the main voice comments there are 160 knots of shear two miles away. That translates into wind speeds of 184 mph. Just eight minutes beyond the time the driver was commenting on taking shelter at Home Depot, the building was destroyed. Roger's advice to get on the interstate may have saved their lives.

William Browning lives in Branson, Mo.


View the original article here