Lodi News-Sentinel

Missouri tornado leaces 25 hurt, 100 in shelters

- By Crystal Thomas, Jason Hancock and Luke Nozicka

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Shingles, insulation and tree branches were scattered all over Neftali Angel’s yard along Adams Street on Thursday morning.

His house, a block away from Capitol Region Medical Center, was mostly unharmed, but parts of his roof sat on his neighbor’s car.

“We have no idea where this came from,” he said, pointing to a 5-foot wooden shard sticking out of the ground near his home.

Close to midnight, he and his wife, Roxanna, had heard the sirens and decided to take cover with Roxanna’s father in the basement once the wind began to pick up. They heard hail and the lights blinked.

Their Chihuahuas, Faline and Charmer, were shaking.

“We were all shaking,” said Roxanna, 23.

They prayed to Jehovah over and over again. They felt the house move.

“It was the worst minutes of our lives,” said Neftali, 24.

The family lived through a tornado that ripped through Jefferson City on Wednesday night, leaving destructio­n in its wake.

On Thursday the National Weather Service in St. Louis said the tornado reached a maximum damage rating of EF-3, based on initial informatio­n from survey teams. The tornado remained on the ground for several minutes before moving out of the city.

The weather service said that on Wednesday night, after sounding the initial tornado warning at 11:08 p.m., it issued a rarely used tornado emergency at 11:43 p.m. as it became clear the tornado would hit the heavily populated state capital.

The tornado emergency alert was created in 2013 after a tornado devastated Moore, Okla.

As of 11 a.m. Thursday in Jefferson City and surroundin­g Cole County, the number of injured stood at 25, according to authoritie­s, Jefferson City police Lt. David Williams said at a morning news conference.

No deaths have been reported in Jefferson City, but three people were killed by a tornado near Golden City in the southweste­rn part of the state.

The number of damaged homes and businesses had not yet been counted, Williams said.

Williams said authoritie­s had not yet decided whether to impose a curfew Thursday night.

About 100 people were taking refuge in three shelters, Williams said, and police did not want to announce the specific locations of shelters for fear of overwhelmi­ng them. He advised members of the public to contact police if they were displaced.

The American Red Cross announced it has opened three shelters in the Jefferson City area, at Thomas Jefferson Middle School, 1201 Fairground­s Road, and in nearby Eldon, at the Upper Elementary School FEMA Tornado Safe Room, 407 E. 15th St., and the Eldon Community Center at 309 E. Second St.

The town of Eldon, about 35 miles southwest of Jefferson City, also suffered damage from the same storm that created the tornado, according to Jason Titus, a meteorolog­ist at the National Weather Service in Springfiel­d.

The storm hit there about 11 p.m., damaging roofs and an apartment complex. No injuries were reported there.

The power company Ameren had 250 workers on the ground responding to gas and electric problems, he said.

Through the morning, residents wandered Ellis Boulevard south of U.S. Route 54, calling family members and taking photos of downed powerlines, split tree trunks and debris scattered across the street.

Nearby at the Hidden Oaks Apartments, Jessica Wheatley said she had awakened in the middle of the night to sirens wailing and objects hitting her windows. Winds tore up her deck. She felt trapped, so she stayed in her bed.

“I thought I was going to die,” she said. “This is definitely mother nature at its worst.”

Not far away, Glen Gessley examined damage at the Community Christian Church, where he is a board member. He said when he got the call at 1 a.m. from the pastor saying the church took a direct hit from the tornado, he thought it might not be as bad as she made it sound.

But he learned he was wrong when he arrived to discover glass throughout the inside of the church, tree limbs thrown across the lawn, and a chair that, before the tornado, was in the front of the sanctuary behind it.

 ?? ROBERT COHEN/ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH ?? “We’re gonna make it man. We’re gonna make it,” said James Stewart, pausing after sweeping up glass at Capitol Kids, a cheer and ninja warrior complex on Ford Street in Jefferson City, Mo., after a tornado ripped through the community on Thursday.
ROBERT COHEN/ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH “We’re gonna make it man. We’re gonna make it,” said James Stewart, pausing after sweeping up glass at Capitol Kids, a cheer and ninja warrior complex on Ford Street in Jefferson City, Mo., after a tornado ripped through the community on Thursday.

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