Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

‘Tornado’s going to win every time’

Family recounts surviving as mobile home ripped apart

- By Michael Goldberg

ROLLING FORK, Miss. — Streams of air whirled past Ida Cartlidge in every direction, but she couldn’t breathe.

Between the thin walls and above the shaky foundation of a mobile home, Cartlidge, 32, miraculous­ly survived a March tornado that carved a path of destructio­n through Rolling Fork, Mississipp­i.

Mobile home residents in the path of a twister’s fury often don’t live to recount the experience.

“It sounded like a real loud train coming through,” Cartlidge said. “And I could feel the wind, it was so powerful you couldn’t even breathe while you were in the air.”

Cartlidge and her husband, Charles Jones, 59, had forged a quiet life in Rolling Fork with their three sons.

She worked in customer service for an appliance company and Jones for a local auto parts shop.

They viewed Rolling Fork as a refuge from city life and an ideal place to raise their children.

The family lived in a mobile home park behind Chuck’s Dairy Bar, a diner that had long been a nexus of local life for Rolling Fork residents.

Then the tornado tore through the park, making it a point of misery.

Tornadoes pop down rapidly, which doesn’t allow meteorolog­ists to give much warning, maybe 10 to 15 minutes.

In many cases, the National Weather Service warns days in advance that the conditions are ripe for tornadoes, but that isn’t the same as warning that one has touched down.

University of Oklahoma social scientist Justin

Sharpe, who studies disaster warnings, said with poor and disabled residents the key is to avoid warnings that simply say “get out now” and nothing else.

Instead, a couple of hours before a tornado is possible, meteorolog­ists should warn people to be packed up and ready to go at a moment’s notice, said Sharpe and Kim Klockow-McClain, a social scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

Most of the 14 people who died in Rolling Fork when the March 24 tornado hit the Mississipp­i Delta lived in the mobile home park, with large families crowding into one or two-bedroom units. Such living arrangemen­ts have been a way to offset the financial strain endemic to the Mississipp­i Delta, where poverty is prevalent

and stable jobs are scarce.

Tornadoes in the United States are disproport­ionately killing more people in mobile or manufactur­ed homes, especially in the South.

Since 1996, tornadoes have killed 815 people in mobile or manufactur­ed homes.

That’s 53% of all the people killed in their homes during a tornado, according to an Associated Press data analysis of National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion tornado deaths.

Cramped living arrangemen­ts forced mobile home inhabitant­s to shelter just as they lived: with little space between them.

“The only thing I could tell them to do was get on the floor,” said Charles Jones, Cartlidge’s husband. “And I got on top. I got on top of my

family.”

Just seconds before Cartlidge found herself burrowed beneath her husband on the mobile home’s living room floor, her father had called her.

He had been watching the news and saw that a tornado had touched down in Rolling Fork.

Cartlidge heard car windows shattering outside.

The home’s windows shattered next.

She scooped up her 1-yearold son and dove to the floor, with her 11- and 12-year-old sons next to her and Jones atop them.

They didn’t know the incoming winds had reached 200 mph.

The storm’s force was instead measured by the fear it induced.

“The only thing that’s holding a mobile home

down are the little straps in the ground,” Cartlidge said. “It picked up the home one time, set it down. It picked it up again, set it down. It picked it up a third time, and we were in the air.”

Her future was suspended in the air alongside her home.

“You don’t know what’s happening next, whether you’re going to live it through it or not,” she said.

The next thing Cartlidge remembers is lying with her back on the ground and the baby resting on her chest.

He was the only member of the family who made it through the storm unscathed.

Her fear didn’t subside. “All you could hear were people screaming and hollering for help,” she recalled.

Cartlidge propped herself

up with a piece of wood and walked to the highway.

She could feel her bones shifting with every step.

She suffered a crushed pelvis bone and broken shoulder.

One of her sons punctured a lung and had shattered bones in his spine and shoulder blade.

Jones injured his ribs and spine.

Since returning from the hospital, the family has been living in a motel room only minutes down the highway from where their mobile home used to be.

Rainstorms still make Cartlidge and Jones anxious, as they experience­d the raw force of a twister firsthand.

“The tornado’s going to win every time,” Jones said. “It’s just like when a nail meets a tire.”

 ?? GERALD HERBERT/AP ?? Ida Cartlidge, right, her son Jakavien Cartlidge, left, and husband, Charles Jones, injured in a deadly twister, stay at the Rolling Fork Motel.
GERALD HERBERT/AP Ida Cartlidge, right, her son Jakavien Cartlidge, left, and husband, Charles Jones, injured in a deadly twister, stay at the Rolling Fork Motel.

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