The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Roof damage reported in D.C.; possible tornado in Virginia

-

Severe weather that spawned tornadoes and left damage in three Southeaste­rn states headed up the Atlantic coast Thursday, taking the roof off two buildings in the nation’s capital and leading forecaster­s to check a possible tornado in Virginia.

Doug Buchanan, spokesman for District of Columbia Fire and EMS, said authoritie­s were called to Gonzaga College High School near Union Station and to an apartment building in the city’s southeaste­rn quadrant. Buchanan said there were no reports of injuries at either scene.

National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Jeff Orrock said investigat­ors were dispatched to the Virginia city of Chesapeake and the towns of Kilmarnock and Irvington, where he said there was a good possibilit­y of a “weak touchdown.”

Orrock said investigat­ors will compare damage patterns with radar data before making a determinat­ion.

An initial round of storms across the Southeast produced one large tornado and reports of more than a halfdozen smaller twisters. Trees were toppled and power lines were brought down in Georgia, while heavy rains drenched areas of Alabama and South Carolina.

The severe weather outbreak was the second to hit the South in less than a week, but no deaths or significan­t injuries had been reported as of Thursday afternoon. A round of storms on Sunday and Monday killed five people, including a Mississipp­i woman who desperatel­y called 911 from a car that plunged into a rain-swollen creek.

Authoritie­s in Johnston, South Carolina, a town of 2,300 that calls itself the peach capital of the world, reported a possible tornado there damaged about a dozen buildings. Crews couldn’t immediatel­y check nearby peach orchards but authoritie­s said a hard freeze in late March had already caused severe damage.

Johnston Mayor Terrence Cullbreath said he opened a local armory as a shelter and that lights were out and many streets were blocked by fallen trees. Thousands had lost power across the three states Wednesday, with utilities struggling to keep up.

“We need power back,” Cullbreath said by phone. “But there likely are more storms coming and they can’t get the power back in bad weather.”

In southwest Georgia, a powerful tornado that touched down at midday traveled some distance on the ground in rural Stewart County, National Weather Service Meteorolog­ist Keith Stellman said. It left downed power lines and trees on roads, said Sandra James, a sheriff’s office dispatcher.

A suspected tornado touched down in southeaste­rn Alabama, before crossing into Georgia, forecaster­s said. All told, at least nine possible tornados had been reported across Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina as the day wore on.

 ?? ALBERT CESARE — THE MONTGOMERY ADVERTISER VIA AP ?? Lightning runs through cloud over Blount Cultural Park in Montgomery, Ala., Wednesday as a thundersto­rm moves through southern Montgomery County. A powerful tornado toppled trees and downed power lines in rural Georgia and similar scenes played out in...
ALBERT CESARE — THE MONTGOMERY ADVERTISER VIA AP Lightning runs through cloud over Blount Cultural Park in Montgomery, Ala., Wednesday as a thundersto­rm moves through southern Montgomery County. A powerful tornado toppled trees and downed power lines in rural Georgia and similar scenes played out in...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States