Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

In Okla. and Texas, 2M at risk for tornadoes

Hail, flash floods among dangers

- By Manny Fernandez

HOUSTON — Forecaster­s warned on Monday that more than 2 million people lie in the path of a series of storms that could produce an outbreak of violent, large-scale tornadoes across parts of Texas and Oklahoma, along with baseball-size hail, flash flooding and hurricanef­orce winds.

The warning, issued by the National Weather Service’s Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla., forecast a “major severe weather outbreak” on Monday over parts of northwest Texas and western and central Oklahoma. By early Monday evening, scattered tornadoes briefly touched down in largely rural areas in southwest and north-central Oklahoma, causing some damage but no reported injuries or fatalities.

But the National Weather Service warned that “the threat for more tornadoes remains high with this storm” in Oklahoma. In the north-central part of the state, local television crews captured images of two twin tornadoes in a rural region near the small town of Crescent. In the southweste­rn corner of the state near the Texas border, a tornado appeared to strike some homes near Mangum, a town of 3,000 more than 150 miles from Oklahoma City.

National Weather Service forecaster­s posted a message on Twitter shortly after 5 p.m., warning about that tornado near Mangum. “Take cover NOW!” a forecaster wrote in the tweet.

As part of the warning issued earlier Monday, the Storm Prediction Center took the rare step of announcing a “high risk” zone for potentiall­y catastroph­ic tornadoes, the first time in two years the center had designated such an area. Numerous cities and towns were placed in the high-risk zone, including the Texas towns of Childress, Haskell and Snyder, as well as Oklahoma City, Norman, Lawton and Moore in Oklahoma.

In 2013, a deadly tornado devastated Moore, a suburb just south of Oklahoma City, destroying an elementary school and killing several students inside. That tornado carved a destructiv­e path in the region for 17 miles and killed 24 people, including 10 children. The timing of the warning was particular­ly ominous for residents of Moore: Monday was the six-year anniversar­y of the tornado that struck the town.

On Monday, several school districts in Oklahoma, including in the Oklahoma City and Tulsa regions, canceled classes. Other residents and agencies were taking their own precaution­s. Tinker Air Force Base, near Oklahoma City, evacuated some aircraft.

The office of the Oklahoma governor, Kevin Stitt, said in a statement that the state’s emergency operations center had been activated and that an advance team from the Federal Emergency Management Agency had been brought in to “help facilitate the delivery of any federal resources that may be needed.”

In a brief video posted on Twitter, a National Weather Service forecaster said to expect “multiple waves of severe thundersto­rms,” adding, “Do not let your guard down on Monday night. It looks like severe storms and flooding will still be a big problem overnight.”

 ?? Joseph Rushmore/The New York Times ?? People take shelter Monday in a Phillips 66 gas station in Perry, Okla. Forecaster­s warned that more than 2 million people lie in the path of a series of storms that could produce tornadoes across parts of Texas and Oklahoma.
Joseph Rushmore/The New York Times People take shelter Monday in a Phillips 66 gas station in Perry, Okla. Forecaster­s warned that more than 2 million people lie in the path of a series of storms that could produce tornadoes across parts of Texas and Oklahoma.

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