The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

1 dead, 2 injured as storms, possible tornados hit South

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CHRISTIANA, TENN. >> Severe storms sweeping across the South on Tuesday killed a person and injured at least two others, knocking down trees and leaving thousands without power, officials said. The weather disrupted Election Day voting in some places, forcing citizens to use paper ballots instead of electronic voting machines.

In Tennessee, crews responded to a collapsed home where one person was confirmed dead, Rutherford County EMS spokesman Patrick Miller told news outlets. He said two others were injured when a nearby mobile home rolled over.

Possible tornados touched down in Tennessee, Louisiana and Mississipp­i, felling tree limbs and power lines and prompting some schools to delay the start of classes. In northeast Alabama near the Tennessee line, the National Weather Service said an apparent tornado damaged barns and smaller buildings, but no injuries were reported.

Tennessee Coordinato­r of Elections Mark Goins said the polling places that had electricit­y knocked out are operating on generators and have emergency ballots ready for voters. He said the paper ballots would be counted Tuesday. He said the largest area of power outages was in Knox County, where nearly 20,000 customers remained without power Tuesday morning.

In West Virginia, storms caused two voting precincts to open a little late but didn’t cause any lasting problems.

West Virginia Secretary of State’s spokesman Michael Queen said 14 precincts were without power at 5 a.m., but the office worked with several state and local agencies to put generators into place or to move precinct locations. He said polling places without power used generators until electricit­y was restored so no paper ballots were necessary.

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