The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Storms, flooding hit area with 1-2 punch

High water lingering into today; expect icy weather to return next.

- By Alexis Stevens astevens@ajc.com and Chelsea Prince Chelsea.Prince@ajc.com

It seemed to come out of nowhere. Lindsey Woodall and

her family were jolted awake shortly after 5 a.m. Thursday by what sounded like a bomb. They quickly realized they were in the path of a powerful storm.

“It picked us and sat down right on our road,” Woodall said. “We have about eight giant trees that look like a giant came through and picked them up.”

The weather that muscled into North Georgia early Thursday toppled trees and power lines

and made travel treacherou­s in metro Atlanta for much of the day.

A falling tree struck a car driving eastbound at Ashford-Dunwoody Road on I-285. The vehicle was smashed but the motorist was not seriously injured, the Dunwoody Police Department said.

Georgia Power and Georgia EMC reported more than 20,000 customers lost electricit­y due to the storms. Most had their power restored by Thursday evening.

In Gwinnett County, a power line fell onto a school bus, but no students were aboard and no injuries were reported. Standing water filled Atlanta’s Krog Street Tunnel, which links Inman Park and Cabbagetow­n. Flooding stranded drivers in Dalton and washed away roads in Cherokee County, while stretches in Fulton, DeKalb, Cobb and Paulding counties were temporaril­y blocked due to water and fallen trees, officials said.

The Red Cross was assisting 12 families displaced from the Garden Court Apartments on Janice Street in East Point. Power outages and structural instabilit­y forced the residents out of their homes, according to a Red Cross spokespers­on. The organizati­on was also assisting six other metro-area families.

The stormy weather Thursday also impacted arrivals and departures at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport. A traffic management program is in place, causing some arriving flights to be delayed an average of 1 hour and 50 minutes, according to the Federal Aviation Administra­tion.

The threat of severe weather was over by late Thursday afternoon, but the risk of flooding lingered. A flash flood watch for most of North Georgia was expected to remain in effect until 7 a.m. today. There’s only a 20% chance of rain in the Friday forecast, according to Glenn Burns, chief meteorolog­ist for Channel 2 Action News. Next, he said, will be the return of winter weather.

“As cold air moves in behind the cold front that brought heavy rain and severe storms, higher elevations could see up to an inch of snowfall overnight through Friday morning,” Burns said.

The forecast forced several North Georgia school districts to delay classes. No accumulati­on is expected in metro Atlanta, but a snowflake or two is possible, Burns said.

North Georgia got some of the most serious soaking Thursday. McCaysvill­e and Morganton in Fannin County got 4.5 inches and 4.22 inches of rain, according to Channel 2. The tiny town of Ila in Morgan County recorded 4.38 inches. Classes were dismissed early in some counties, while others dealt with tornado warnings.

Woodall said she and her Gordon County neighbors are grateful to be alive, given all the suddenly horizontal trees. A neighbor’s car was crushed but no one was hurt, she said. Her uncle owns a 50-acre cattle farm nearby, and while his home sustained significan­t damage, his animals weren’t hurt.

“We’re just a bunch of survivors up here,” she said. “We’re really fortunate.”

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Downed trees and localized flooding were everywhere Thursday, this tree damaging a vehicle parked on 13th Street in Atlanta. The weather came in the morning and stayed for the day.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM Downed trees and localized flooding were everywhere Thursday, this tree damaging a vehicle parked on 13th Street in Atlanta. The weather came in the morning and stayed for the day.
 ?? JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? Motorists navigate pooling water Thursday on the Camp Creek Parkway exit from southbound I-85 near Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport. Georgia Power and Georgia EMC said more than 20,000 customers lost power.
JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM Motorists navigate pooling water Thursday on the Camp Creek Parkway exit from southbound I-85 near Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport. Georgia Power and Georgia EMC said more than 20,000 customers lost power.
 ?? JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM ?? Multiple crashes were reported Thursday morning as storms moved through. A deluge fell across the metro area as motorists experience­d a challengin­g day on the roads. Overnight, Channel 2 Action News chief meteorolog­ist Glenn Burns said northerly locations would see rapid snowfall into today.
JOHN SPINK / JSPINK@AJC.COM Multiple crashes were reported Thursday morning as storms moved through. A deluge fell across the metro area as motorists experience­d a challengin­g day on the roads. Overnight, Channel 2 Action News chief meteorolog­ist Glenn Burns said northerly locations would see rapid snowfall into today.

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