The Peterborough Examiner

Storms kill 15 in U.S.

South, Midwest brace for flooding, tornadoes following deadly weekend

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ATLANTA — Parts of the U.S. South and Midwest braced for flooding and possible tornadoes Monday following a weekend of deadly torrents and powerful winds that claimed at least 15 lives.

Heavy rain caused the roof of a furniture store in northern Oklahoma to collapse early Monday, although no one was injured, and parts of the state remained under flood and flash flood warnings after excessive rainfall over the weekend. The Illinois River that snakes through the eastern part of the state crested Sunday night at about nine metres — well above major flood stage of five metres.

Tornado warnings were issued for parts of southeaste­rn Alabama and central Georgia on Monday morning by the National Weather Service, which advised residents to take cover. A severe thundersto­rm located over Fort Benning, Ga., was at risk for developing into a twister, the weather service said.

Severe weather was expected elsewhere in the South. Parts of the Florida Panhandle could be affected by severe thundersto­rms or high winds and dangerous rip currents. In Mississipp­i, a wind advisory was in effect in the northwest. A flood warning was in effect for rivers in Arkansas, Mississipp­i and Louisiana.

Over the weekend, tornadoes hit several small towns in East Texas, killing four people. Flooding and winds killed five people in Arkansas, including a fire chief who was struck by a vehicle while working during the storm.

Three deaths were reported in Missouri, including a woman who drowned after rushing water swept away a car and a 78-year-old man who left his home to look at the floodwater­s and was then carried away by the water. One of two deaths in Mississipp­i included a seven-year-old who was electrocut­ed after unplugging an electric golf cart and dropping the cord in water on the ground. A two-yearold girl died in Tennessee after being struck by a soccer goal post thrown by heavy winds.

The storms rolled through Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Alabama on Sunday with strong winds causing isolated pockets of damage.

Middle Tennessee was hit by a strong line of storms that knocked down trees and power lines earlier Sunday. Wind and flood advisories were in effect for much of the state Monday.

Interstate 44 was closed over a 90-km stretch in Missouri due to flooding, according to the Missouri Department of Transporta­tion. Flooding closed roads in hundreds of other locations around the state.

Near Clever in southweste­rn Missouri, a man tried to save his 72-year-old wife from floodwater­s that swept away their vehicle Saturday, but her body was found when the water receded, the Missouri State Highway Patrol said.

In Texas, search teams were going door to door Sunday after tornadoes the day before flattened homes, uprooted trees and flipped several pickup trucks at a Dodge dealership in Canton.

“It is heartbreak­ing and upsetting to say the least,” Canton Mayor Lou Ann Everett told reporters at a news conference Sunday morning.

The storms cut a path of destructio­n 56 km long and 24 km wide in Van Zandt County, Everett said. The largely rural area is about 80 km east of Dallas. The National Weather Service found evidence of four tornadoes with one twister possibly on the ground for 80 km.

The first reports of tornadoes came about 4:45 p.m. Saturday, but emergency crews were hampered by continuing severe weather, said Judge Don Kirkpatric­k, the chief executive for Van Zandt County.

“We’d be out there working and get a report of another tornado on the ground,” he said.

 ?? SARAH A. MILLER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kimberly Chandler stands by her destroyed truck and debris from her home in Canton, Texas, on Sunday. Severe weather killed at least 15 people on the weekend.
SARAH A. MILLER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kimberly Chandler stands by her destroyed truck and debris from her home in Canton, Texas, on Sunday. Severe weather killed at least 15 people on the weekend.

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