Chattanooga Times Free Press

Rare August tornado sends 30 to hospital in Tulsa; no deaths

- BY KEN MILLER

OKLAHOMA CITY — A rare late summer tornado smashed into a shopping district of Tulsa early Sunday just hours after it was packed with people, sending more than two dozen to hospitals including two with life-threatenin­g injuries, many of them from restaurant­s that were either preparing to close or were still open.

No deaths were reported from the tornado that struck shortly after 1 a.m. in the midtown area of Tulsa, according to city of Tulsa spokeswoma­n Kim Meloy.

National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Mike Teague said the tornado was rated an EF2, with wind speeds of 111-135 mph and that two smaller, “probably” EF0 tornadoes with winds of 65-85 mph were seen shortly afterward on radar near Inola and Claremore, about 25 miles east and northeast of Tulsa.

Emergency Medical Services Authority spokeswoma­n Kelli Bruer said the ambulance company transporte­d a total of 13 people to area hospitals, eight from a TGI Fridays restaurant, which lists its closing time as 1 a.m., four from a 24-hour Whataburge­r restaurant, and one person who was in the area.

St. Francis Hospital spokeswoma­n Lauren Landwerlin said about 30 people were treated at the hospital. Meloy said many people were taken to hospitals by private vehicles.

One of the most severely injured was in TGI Fridays and the other was inside the Whataburge­r, Bruer said.

The timing of the storm was fortunate, according to Meloy, because hundreds, if not thousands of people were in the area only hours earlier.

“It’s a highly commercial area with a lot of people normally in there. There’s a mall, there’s a movie theater,” in addition to the restaurant­s, Meloy said. The area also includes some industrial sites.

The mall had closed at 9 p.m. Saturday, according to its website. A phone call to the mall was not answered Sunday.

The estimated one-square-mile area remained blocked off Sunday while crews worked to remove the debris, Meloy said.

Resident Rayvonne Marchesell­i said she received a tornado warning on her cellphone about five minutes before the storm hit.

 ?? TOM GILBERT/TULSA WORLD VIA AP ?? Debris from a storm covers a street in Tulsa, Okla., on Sunday.
TOM GILBERT/TULSA WORLD VIA AP Debris from a storm covers a street in Tulsa, Okla., on Sunday.

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