Houston Chronicle

Tornadoes whip Plains, cause damage in Okla.

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OKLAHOMA CITY — An intense storm system that weather forecaster­s labeled “particular­ly dangerous” swept through the Southern Plains on Monday, spawning a few tornadoes that caused some damage and a deluge of rain but no reports of injuries.

The National Weather Service had warned that Monday evening could bring perilous weather to a large swath of western Texas, most of Oklahoma and southern Kansas. The storm was expected to move later Monday into western Arkansas.

As predicted, some tornadoes were reported early Monday evening, although so far they have been in sparsely populated areas. Oklahoma residents were on alert as Monday is the sixth anniversar­y of a massive tornado in Moore, south of Oklahoma City, that killed 24 people.

A tornado struck western and northern portions of the southweste­rn Oklahoma town of Mangum on Monday afternoon. Glynadee Edwards, the Greer County emergency management director, says some homes incurred roof damage and the high school’s agricultur­e barn was destroyed, but the livestock survived.

“The pigs are walking around wondering what happened to their house,” she said.

Emergency officials reported a tornado near Lucien, in northern Oklahoma, severely damaging a house and destroying a barn.

Officials closed schools, evacuated military aircraft and issued high-water warnings Monday.

School districts in Oklahoma City, nearby Norman and elsewhere canceled classes as forecasts also call for hail and wind gusts of up to 80 mph in Oklahoma. A flood watch is in effect for the greater Oklahoma City region. Strong winds and hail also are forecast for West Texas, where school districts in Abilene and elsewhere were sending students home early.

Tinker Air Force Base near Oklahoma City evacuated several planes to other military installati­ons in anticipati­on of storm damage. Meanwhile, state workers in several Oklahoma counties were sent home early Monday.

Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt said in a statement that the state emergency operations center was activated and urged motorists not to drive around barricades or into flooded roadways.

In Oklahoma City, emergency management officials opened the Multi-Agency Coordinati­on Center, an undergroun­d bunker on the city’s northeast side that serves as a clearingho­use for coordinati­ng informatio­n about severe weather events and other major emergencie­s.

Some flights at Will Rogers World Airport in Oklahoma City were canceled to avoid damage to aircraft and the possibilit­y of extended delays elsewhere.

It’s the latest round of severe weather to strike the region after a spate of tornadoes raked the Southern Plains on Friday and Saturday, leaving widespread damage and some people injured.

Also Monday, subtropica­l storm Andrea became the first named storm of the Atlantic season, forming about southwest of Bermuda.

The National Hurricane Center on Monday tweeted that Andrea had a “well-defined center” with maximum sustained winds of about 40 mph. It said in an advisory Monday evening that the storm is centered about 335 miles southwest of Bermuda in the western Atlantic and moving northward at 14 mph.

 ?? George Hubka / MG News via Associated Press ?? Authoritie­s say severe thundersto­rms in western portions of Texas, most of Oklahoma and southern Kansas spawned a few tornadoes, damaging barns and knocking down trees.
George Hubka / MG News via Associated Press Authoritie­s say severe thundersto­rms in western portions of Texas, most of Oklahoma and southern Kansas spawned a few tornadoes, damaging barns and knocking down trees.
 ?? Joseph Rushmore / New York Times ?? A tornado passes just south of Perry, Okla., on Monday. Forecaster­s warned that more than 2 million people lie in the path of a series of storms.
Joseph Rushmore / New York Times A tornado passes just south of Perry, Okla., on Monday. Forecaster­s warned that more than 2 million people lie in the path of a series of storms.

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