New York Daily News

Twister torment

Dallas ducks calamity, but 4 killed in Okla. & Ark.

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A tornado tossed trees into homes, tore off storefront­s and downed power lines but killed not one in a densely populated area of Dallas, leaving Mayor Eric Johnson to declare the city “very fortunate” to be assessing only property damage.

A meteorolog­ist said Monday that people took shelter thanks to early alerts, and that it was lucky the tornado struck Sunday evening, when many people were home.

“Anytime you have a tornado in a major metropolit­an area, the potential for large loss of life is always there,” said Patrick Marsh, the warning coordinati­on meteorolog­ist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla. “We were very fortunate that the tornado did not hit the Dallas Cowboys’ stadium or the State Fair, where you would have had a lot of people that were exposed.”

The tornado crossed over two major interstate­s. “If that happened at rush hour, I think we’d be talking about a different story,” he said.

The National Weather Service said the tornado that ripped through North Dallas was an EF-3, which has a maximum wind speed of 140 mph. The agency said another tornado in the suburb of Rowlett was EF-1, with maximum wind speeds of 100 mph.

The late-night storms spawned tornadoes in several states, killing at least four people in Arkansas and Oklahoma. The Storm Prediction Center said severe thundersto­rms could continue through Monday night along the Gulf Coast from southeast Louisiana to the Florida Panhandle, with damaging winds and a couple of tornadoes possible.

In one Dallas neighborho­od, Dustin and Lauren Collins said they felt lucky as they cleared debris from the yard of their largely intact home.

“When other people’s homes are in your front yard, you just realize — just the magnitude of the storm,” said Lauren Collins, 36.

Dustin Collins, 37, said he gathered his family together after receiving the tornado alert. They climbed into the bathtub and pulled a mattress over top, huddling there with their 8-monthold son.

“We just sat in the bathtub and sang songs, trying to keep everyone calm,” Lauren Collins said.

Nearby, Georges Benamou said he was in his bedroom when a tree branch fell through the flat roof of his single-story home and into the living room.

“I heard some crack, crack, crack, and then I heard some trees falling on top of the roof,” he said.

Dallas Fire-Rescue spokesman Jason Evans said no firefighte­rs were hurt when the storm made the roof of Station 41 collapse.

One person died when a tree fell on a home in Rogers, Ark., about 150 miles northwest of Little Rock, according to the Benton County Department of Public Safety.

Authoritie­s said severe thundersto­rms were responsibl­e for the deaths of at least three people in eastern Oklahoma.

Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigat­ion spokeswoma­n Brooke Arbeitman said two teenage boys died of carbon monoxide poisoning late Sunday in Weleetka, about 80 miles east of Oklahoma City. She said the 14and 15-year-old boys were using a portable gas generator in a travel trailer after the storms knocked out power. The father of the younger boy discovered their bodies Monday morning.

Another person died late Sunday night when a tree blew onto a mobile home near Valliant, about 170 miles southeast of Oklahoma City, emergency management officials said.

 ??  ?? Henry Ramirez and his mother, Maribel Morales, are shattered to see wreckage of their church, Primera Iglesia Dallas, but city was “fortunate” no lives were lost, officials said. Inset, Preston Hollow home is also in ruins after storm.
Henry Ramirez and his mother, Maribel Morales, are shattered to see wreckage of their church, Primera Iglesia Dallas, but city was “fortunate” no lives were lost, officials said. Inset, Preston Hollow home is also in ruins after storm.

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