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Lethal App Review Response: Washington State Tornadoes and Earthquakes

Posted: May 18th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: app store response, disaster, earthquakes, LETHAL, tornado | Tags: , , , , , | No Comments »

Another sub-par review because someone thinks we are wrong about the information in LETHAL. When actually, we are right.

washington1

Earthquakes are a real threat in Washington State, the most recent occurrence being in 1996. The potential for more happening in the future is there, because of existing, known fault lines.

Tornadoes are often also real threat in Washington State.  In 1972, Washington lead the country in tornado deaths. And in 1997, 6 tornadoes touched down in Washington state in a single day.

 April 5, 1972 – Washington’s Deadliest Tornado Outbreak

* An F3 tornado touched down in Vancouver

* 6 deaths and 300 injured, Washington led nation in tornado deaths that year

* Tornado swept through a grocery store, bowling alley, and grade school near where Vancouver Mall is today

* 50 million dollars in damage

* Later that day, another F3 tornado touched down west of Spokane

* And an F2 tornado struck rural Stevens county

* Numerous severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds were reported over other areas of eastern Washington 

As for the Great White Shark in the woods, it’s likely the user is in a coastal forest, and when in a coastal area, we list the dangers that the oceans represent, as a general rule.

It’s frustrating that our app consistently gets bad reviews for having information that is accurate, but unexpected or against “common wisdom.” Oh well.


Tornado Kills 3 in Missouri

Posted: May 15th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, tornado | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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Tornadoes kill 3 people in Missouri

KIRKSVILLE, Mo. (AP) — Violent storms tore through four Midwestern states, killing three people in northern Missouri, damaging dozens of homes and leaving thousands without power.

Kirksville apparently took the hardest hit Wednesday night. Police Detective Sgt. Ron Celian said about 30 to 40 homes were damaged, one was destroyed and an auto dealership sustained significant damage.

Lynne Sanders told the Kirksville Daily Express she took shelter in a bathtub while a tornado flipped one of her sheds, destroyed another and sucked up a barn while leaving the horses inside.

“It was just awful, simply awful,” she said. “The whole house was just rocking.”

Sullivan County Emergency Management director Rick Gardner said a woman was killed Wednesday night when what appeared to be a tornado struck a mobile home east of Milan in Sullivan County.

Two other people died in neighboring Adair County, said communications operator Tammy Babcock of the Missouri State Highway Patrol. She called all three deaths are tornado-related.

Missouri State Highway Patrol Sgt. Brent Bernhardt said the Adair County sheriff flew over the area to inspect the damage and said in some places the tornado was only 500 feet wide.

“It was not wide,” Bernhardt said. “It would be on the ground and then come back up and be on the ground again.”

In Caddo County in southwest Oklahoma, a possible tornado damaged homes and businesses in Gracemont and Anadarko, authorities said.

Dozens of inmates were evacuated from the Caddo County jail because of a gas line break, said Caddo County Emergency Management Director Larry McDuffey.

In northeast Oklahoma, a 100 mph wind gust was recorded west of the Bartlesville airport in Washington County, authorities said. The high winds downed trees and power lines, with 8,000 power outages reported at one point.

Central Indiana saw wind gusts of up to 60 mph and street flooding was reported in Vincennes, Linton and Rockville, authorities said. Utilities reported 8,000 were without power in and around Indianapolis early Thursday.

In Illinois, a range of windy storms dumped as much as 3 inches of rain within 50 minutes. National Weather Service meteorologist Ed Shimon called the accumulation “unbelievable,” comparing it to heavy rainfall in the tropics.

The storm was continuing in southern Illinois early Thursday, with lightning, heavy rain and strong wind gusts, Shimon said.

The latest storms come less than a week after another batch of severe weather, including at least a dozen confirmed tornadoes, ravaged parts of southern Missouri. Those storms killed four people and damaged or destroyed several hundred homes.

Associated Press writers Heather Hollingsworth and Andale Gross in Kansas City and Rochelle Hines in Oklahoma City contributed to this report.


Tornado Kills Woman in Missouri

Posted: May 13th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, tornado | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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Woman, 83, dies in mobile home as tornado strikes northeast Missouri

Missouri officials say one person was killed this evening in the northeastern part of the state as violent weather, including a tornado, struck the area.

The victim was an 83-year-old woman. She was killed in her mobile home near Milan in Sullivan County.

More severe damage happened near and in the northern part of Kirksville. Three people were moderately injured when a gust of wind overturned their car, pinning them inside. Other people were trapped in their basements, according to Susie Stonner of the State Emergency Management Agency. Flash-flooding and various minor injuries were also reported.

Thirty to 40 homes were damaged in the Bob White area of Kirksville, city police said. At a car dealership, windows shattered, vehicles were damaged and a gas leak was reported.

No damage or injuries were reported at Truman State University.

U.S. 63 reopened before 10 p.m. after a gas-line leak and downed power lines caused it to close.

More minor damage was reported elsewhere. To the east in Knox County, two miles north of Edina, trees and power poles snapped across Missouri 15. Damage to structures also was reported in that area.

One shelter opened at a church in Kirksville. A Highway Patrol Command center was also opened in Knox County south of the Kirksville-Edina area, Stonner said.

Storms had mostly cleared from the Kansas City area by 8 p.m. A watch over Cass County is expected to expire by 11 p.m.

Continued severe storms were expected all night, according to Andy Bailey of the National Weather Service. The cold front causing them is expected to move from the northeast to the southeast part of the state.

 


Stay in the Car During a Tornado

Posted: May 11th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, tornado | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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Expert advice on how to survive dangerous encounters with nature can be so inconsistent. Should we run or face a mountain lion? Apparently it’s a crapshoot! And now, we’re being told – by the Red Cross – that you should stay in the car during a tornado. Before we were being advised to find a ditch and lie in it. And actually, the National Weather Service still stands by that older recommendation.

Stay in the car or get out when near a tornado


(5/10/09) By Jeniffer Berry – Tornado rules usually tell us when we are in a car and near a tornado we should leave our vehicle and lie flat in a ditch.

The American Red Cross is now changing that recommendation.

Red Cross officials said it is actually safer to stay in your vehicle during a tornado.

The National Weather Service is not so sure that is the best thing to do.

They are still recommending people leave their cars and find a ditch if they are out in the open during a tornado.

“The reason why we tell people to go to a ditch and lay flat down is that it offers some protection against the flying debris. When a home is damaged when a car becomes air born all those things leave the ground and are flying. If you are standing or in a vehicle you are more apt to be struck by debris than if you are lying flat,” said Brian Hirsch, National Weather Service.

Hirsch said the National Weather Service and the Red Cross both agree the best case scenario is for people to be aware of approaching severe weather.


Tornado in Vermont

Posted: May 10th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, tornado | Tags: , | No Comments »

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Fairly rare.

Tornado confirmed in Vermont

Associated Press 

WASHINGTON, Vt. (AP) — A tornado touched down in central Vermont Saturday afternoon, ripping the roof off an apartment building, according to National Weather Service investigators.

The storm tore a half-mile path through Washington, Vt., tearing the roof off the two-story building, knocking over a metal barn and snapping trees. There were no reports of injuries. The building’s owner told the Rutland Herald that all but one family had found temporary housing with family or friends by Saturday night.

According to Weather Services investigators, multiple eyewitnesses observed the tornado. Their descriptions and observations of the debris pattern support the conclusion that a tornado touched down.

The Weather Service estimated winds ranged from 90 to 100 miles an hour.

Tornadoes are relatively rare in Vermont. On average 1 tornado is reported every two years. A tornado in May is an even rarer event. According to the Weather Service, a quick search of tornado records for the state reveals that this is the 2nd earliest confirmed tornado there since 1950.

 


Thirteen Tornadoes in Ozarks

Posted: May 10th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, tornado | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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I am amazed at how common tornadoes actually are.

UPDATE 13 tornadoes confirmed in the Ozarks from Friday’s storms

SPRINGFIELD — The National Weather Service confirms 13 tornadoes swept through the Ozarks as of Saturday evening.

EF0 (2):

Ebenezer, southeast of Mountain Grove in Texas County

EF1 (7):

Willard, Republic, Fordland, Garrison, north of Peace Valley in Howell County, north of Ava, near Mount Zion.

EF2 (3):

Lebanon, Good Hope and Charity

EF3 (1):

Pamona


Two Tornadoes in Tennessee

Posted: May 10th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, tornado | Tags: , | No Comments »

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NWS confirms 2 tornado touchdowns in E. Tenn.

MORRISTOWN (WATE) — The National Weather Service in Morristown has confirmed that two tornadoes touched down in East Tennessee during severe storms on Friday, May 8. 

The first was in Scott County, five miles south of Huntsville near the Fairview community. 

The EF-2 tornado produced 135 mph winds, uprooting trees and causing a cell phone tower to collapse.

The second confirmed EF-2 tornado was in Claiborne County, near 192 Cole Road in New Tazewell.

That tornado produced 110 mph winds and touched down at the top of a hill and hit one home, taking off its roof and one side of the house. It also destroyed two barns across the street. 


Tornadoes in Kansas Kill 2

Posted: May 10th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, tornado | Tags: , , | No Comments »

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Gov. declares emergency after tornado kills 2

RICHMOND, Ky. — Gov. Steve Beshear declared a state of emergency Saturday after a tornado killed two people in central Kentucky and flooding sent hundreds scrambling for dry land in the eastern part of the state.

On Friday, an EF2 tornado with winds of 120 mph struck the Kirksville community of Richmond, about 20 miles south-southeast of Lexington, National Weather Service Meteorologist Nathan Foster said.

Glenda Charbonnel, 42, and Shawn Yarber, 35, were found dead in a pond near a mobile home community, Madison County emergency management spokeswoman Roma Pedeau said. Witnesses told authorities they were leaving a trailer when it “exploded.”

Michael Bryant, assistant deputy emergency management director for Madison County, said at least eight other people were injured. About 150 homes are damaged and destroyed, he said.

Madison County, the city of Richmond and some 13 other counties have declared states of emergency, said Buddy Rogers, spokesman for the Kentucky Division of Emergency Management. Such declarations allow local governments to spend money on storm-related expenses and ask the state for help.

More than 40 Kentucky National Guard troops were deployed to Madison County to assist with traffic control and security. Sixty troops are conducting door-to-door wellness checks and evacuation missions after floods in Breathitt, Knott, Foyd, Pike and Owsley counties. The guardsmen, many of whom returned from Afghanistan in March, will be on duty for disaster relief until Monday, according to a news release.

“We are prepared to use every available resource to help our officials and our people make it through these rough conditions, whatever may come,” Beshear said in a statement. “Our thoughts and prayers go out to the family who lost their loved one and to those who were injured.”

Many counties also reported trees down, hail and high winds throughout the late afternoon and evening as the storms swept across the state. Heavy rainfall during the night caused streams to overflow their embankments. Mudslides and downed trees have roads blocked in several counties.

Pike County Emergency Manager Bud Tackett told The Herald-Leader there is extensive flooding that has damaged homes, roads and water lines.

Pikeville had about 30 mudslides overnight, and Ky. 1460 was impassable, City Manager Donovan Blackburn said.

The state transportation department has sent engineers to Floyd, Breathitt, Owsley and Pike counties to assess road damage caused by flooding, and the Department of Fish and Wildlife has sent boats to Pike County and a few other areas to assist with evacuating residents stranded by high water, Rogers said.

“In a lot of these areas they don’t have time to do damage assessment because they are still in response mode and trying to get people from high water,” he said.

In Louisville, Churchill Downs suspended the last five races of the day due to heavy showers and thunderstorms, saying in a news release it was just the third cancellation of its kind in the last 19 years. The last time the track canceled races was May 30, 2004, due to tornado warnings, said track spokesman John Asher.


Tornado in Oregon

Posted: May 9th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, tornado | Tags: , | No Comments »

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This is not usual.

Rare tornado damages ranch in Umatilla County

by Casey Parks, The Oregonian

Thursday May 07, 2009, 7:40 PM

A rare tornado badly damaged a ranch just north of Pendleton, the National Weather Service said today.

The tornado, which touched down Wednesday night and had winds up to 90 mph, was the first confirmed tornado in Oregon this year. It traveled 1.6 miles and had a 40-yard-wide path. 

The unusual event occurred amid a forecast of unstable conditions including thunderstorms through today in parts of northeast Oregon and southeast Washington. The cause is colder air moving in above relatively warmer air at the surface.

Conditions are expected to improve Friday, although temperatures will remain cooler than usual, the Weather Service said.


Tornado Traps Family in Alabama

Posted: May 7th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: disaster, tornado | Tags: , | No Comments »

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Storms hit Ala. for 2nd day; tornado traps family

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — A day after heavy wind, rain and hail damaged homes across the South, torrential rains and possible tornadoes hit central Alabama on Thursday, flooding roads and briefly trapping a family when a tree fell on their mobile home.

No one was hurt, but authorities were forced to close a main road between Montgomery and nearby Wetumpka that was covered by floodwaters. Other roads were deep in water as heavy rains and thunderstorms pounded the area. Street flooding was so bad at one point at the Statehouse that legislators halted work to check on their cars, some submerged in window-high water.

“It is unusual to see cars floating in the parking lot. But it’s just a car. Thankfully no one was hurt,” said state Sen. Harri Anne Smith, R-Slocomb, whose new Hyundai Genesis was flooded.

Derek Hamilton, chief sergeant of arms at the Statehouse, said four feet of water was standing in the statehouse basement. Power was turned off as a precaution.

The legislators were preparing to reconvene across the street at the historic old Capitol, which sits on a hill and was unaffected. It will be the first time lawmakers have met there since 1986, when the House and Senate moved into the new statehouse.

Tuskegee police said a family had to be rescued after a tree fell into their mobile home about 7 a.m. CDT.

The National Weather Service said hazardous weather could threaten central and southern Alabama counties through the day as the storms pushed into southern Georgia.

Weather officials also confirmed that a Wednesday tornado caused damage across two counties in north Alabama. Michael Coyne of the weather service office in Huntsville said the tornado left a path of destruction nearly 11 miles long that was up to 75 yards wide in places.

More than 100 homes and businesses were damaged in the South on Wednesday by strong winds, heavy rains and golf ball-sized hail. Strong winds damaged homes in Arkansas and North Carolina, and debris blocked roads and damaged houses in north Mississippi. No serious injuries were reported.

Officials also increased the flow of water through dams to ease swollen rivers, including the Mississippi.

Associated Press writers Jay Reeves in Birmingham, Phillip Rawls in Montgomery and Garry Mitchell in Mobile contributed to this report.