Powerful storms packing winds near hurricane force killed at least one woman Friday in Florida as a week of deadly severe weather continued in the South, where uprooted trees crashed onto homes and knocked out electricity to thousands in several states.
The National Weather Service said wind gusts of 71 mph (114 kph), just shy of hurricane force, were recorded in Tallahassee, where images posted on social media showed mangled metal and other debris from damaged buildings littering parts of Florida’s capital city.
The Sheriff’s Office for Leon County, which includes Tallahassee, said in a Facebook post Friday that a woman was killed when a tree fell onto her family’s home.
The storm that struck Tallahassee early Friday also knocked two chimneys from apartment buildings at a complex where fallen trees covered a row of cars. Fencing was left bent at the baseball stadium of Florida State University, where classes were canceled Friday.
The woman killed in Florida was at least the fourth death caused by severe weather in the Southeast this week. Storms were blamed for killing two people in Tennessee on Wednesday, when another storm death was reported in North Carolina.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said on the X social media platform Friday that the state Division of Emergency Management was working with local officials to “do everything possible to return life to normalcy for our residents as quickly as possible.”
“Restoration will possibly take through the weekend,” the announcement said.
Strong thunderstorms also were expected in Alabama near the Florida Panhandle, where gusty winds could knock down tree limbs, the weather service said.
Nearly 280,000 homes and businesses from Mississippi to North Carolina were blacked out late Friday morning, according to the tracking website poweroutage.us. Most of those outages were in Florida, where lights and air conditioning were out for more than 180,000 customers.
In Mississippi’s capital city of Jackson, authorities on Friday were asking residents to conserve and boil water as a precaution after a power outage at one of its major water treatment plants. JXN Water, the local water utility, said customers could expect reduced water pressure as workers assessed damage from overnight storms.
“It will take many hours for the system to recover and some places may take longer,” Ted Henifin, the water system’s manager, said in a statement.
Several tornado warnings and watches were issued by the National Weather Service on Friday morning, but were lifted by midday as the threat shifted to damaging high winds.
Other parts of the South were cleaning up from storm damage inflicted earlier in the week. In the rural farming community of Vidalia, Georgia, and surrounding Toombs County, officials said a tornado left a path of destruction roughly 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) long Thursday afternoon.
About 10 houses had trees crash onto or through their roofs and crews worked through the night to remove about 50 downed trees that were blocking roads, said Lynn Moore, Emergency Management Director for Toombs County. Winds tore part of the roof from one Vidalia business and lofted it across a road, where the debris smashed into a brick wall and fell onto an unoccupied SUV, Moore said.
A dozen car wrecks were reported as the storm passed, Moore said, but nobody in the county was reported injured.
“We’re fortunate that it wasn’t stronger than it was,” Moore said.
Also Thursday, the weather service reported a hurricane-force wind gust of 76 miles per hour (122 kph) in Autauga County, Alabama. And one person was injured in Rankin County, Mississippi, after a tree fell crashing onto a home, according to weather service damage reports.
Since Monday, 39 states have been under threat of severe weather and at least four people have died. On Wednesday and Thursday, about 220 million people were under some sort of severe weather risk, said Matthew Elliott, a Storm Prediction Center forecaster.
The weather comes on the heels of a stormy April in which the U.S. had 300 confirmed tornadoes, the second-most on record for the month and the most since 2011. Both the Plains and Midwest have been hammered by tornadoes this Spring.
Officials in New Hope, North Carolina, said Wednesday that a man was found dead in his car after winds pushed a tree onto it.
In Tennessee, a storm was blamed for killing a 22-year-old man in a car in Claiborne County, north of Knoxville, officials said. In Maury County south of Nashville, a woman was killed when winds tossed a mobile home into a wooded area. County officials said a tornado with 140 mph (225 kph) winds damaged or destroyed more than 100 homes.
Torrential rains led to a flash flood emergency and water rescues northeast of Nashville, and the weather service issued a tornado emergency, its highest alert level, for nearby areas.
A 10-year-old boy was seriously injured in Christiana, southeast of Nashville, when he got caught in a storm drain and swept under streets while playing with other children as adults cleared debris, his father, Rutherford County Schools Superintendent Jimmy Sullivan, posted on social media.
The boy, Asher, emerged in a drainage ditch and survived after being given CPR, “but the damage is substantial,” Sullivan posted on Facebook, asking for prayers.
“Asher needs a miracle,” Sullivan wrote.
Dozens of people gathered at the school district’s offices for a prayer vigil Thursday. They bowed their heads and closed their eyes in prayer, and they sang “Amazing Grace” together.
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Republished with permission of the Associated Press.
3 comments
Julia
May 10, 2024 at 7:24 pm
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Not one dollar
May 11, 2024 at 8:57 am
Do not ask for one federal dollar for help. The south hates the U.S. government and worked to overthrow it on Jan 6 and plans the same in 2024.
When you are anti democracy ask the oligarchs for money and see if Mar a lago gives you anything other than selling u a bible
rick whitaker
May 11, 2024 at 3:33 pm
NOT ONE DOLLAR, states rights suck when you need a hand from the government. florida needs to wall off it’s electric system like texas did. that way you can make it far better than the federal grid. but you have to spend lots of money for things that also help the poor and the ethnic just as much, naw, we don’t need to spend the money. thieves love states rights, it’s so much easier to steal on a state level.
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