Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Storms sweep South, killing 1 in Florida

Hurricane-force winds uproot trees, damage buildings, knock out power

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TALLAHASSE­E, Fla. — Powerful storms packing hurricane-force winds 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.

City officials in Tallahasse­e said wind gusts of 80 to 100 mph, speeds that exceed hurricane intensity, were reported in Florida’s capital city. Images posted on social media showed mangled metal and other debris from damaged buildings littering some areas.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday issued an executive order declaring a state of emergency for 12 counties in the northern part of the state affected by the storm.

A statement on the Tallahasse­e government’s website said crews were scrambling to repair 100 broken power poles while half the homes and businesses were left without electricit­y in a city of 200,000 people. It said the National Weather Service was assessing paths of three potential tornadoes.

“Our area experience­d catastroph­ic wind damage,” Tallahasse­e Mayor John Dailey said on the social platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

Crews have told customers in the dark that the restoratio­n may take days. City officials expect the work to restore power will go through the weekend.

City spokespers­on Alison Faris told The Tallahasse­e Democrat that the extent of the damage has made restoratio­n hard-going because crews are focused on fixing the transmissi­on infrastruc­ture before they can start work on the distributi­on of power that energizes homes and businesses.

“Transmissi­on first and then we restore circuits which impacts distributi­on,” Faris told the Democrat. “All hands are on the transmissi­on. We should start seeing some circuits repaired here shortly.”

The first wave of more than 215 personnel from 20 utilities in Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia and South Carolina has arrived to help crews as they work to repair the electric system.

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.

DeSantis said on social media 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.”

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.

An estimated 201,000 homes and businesses from Mississipp­i to North Carolina were blacked out Friday afternoon, according to the tracking website poweroutag­e.us. Most of those outages were in Florida, where lights and air conditioni­ng were out for nearly 142,000 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, Ga., and surroundin­g Toombs County, officials said a tornado left a path of destructio­n roughly 2 miles 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.

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