San Francisco Chronicle

Deadly storm shifts course — threat of disaster eases

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DALLAS — An unsettled weather pattern that so far this week has contribute­d to the deaths of six people in the Southern Plains shifted into the Ohio Valley and southern United States on Thursday, but forecaster­s say the next round of severe weather won’t be as bad as initially anticipate­d.

The Storm Prediction Center rolled back what had been a relatively ominous outlook and said that while some tornadoes could occur Thursday, the likelihood of several twisters was low. Morning storms along the Gulf Coast and in the Upper Midwest reduced the risk for “robust” instabilit­y later in the day, the forecaster­s said.

The greatest chance of severe storms is expected in an area from St. Louis to Indianapol­is to Cincinnati to Nashville. Other storms could occur from Ohio to the Gulf Coast.

This week’s storms contribute­d to the deaths of three storm chasers in West Texas, two children who touched a downed power line in Fort Worth, Texas, and a truck driver whose rig was blown off Interstate 40 in El Reno, Okla.

As late as Wednesday, the Norman, Okla.-based center was predicting an “active weather event” Thursday from New Orleans to Cincinnati. While hail, high winds and tornadoes could occur, the energy needed to produce the worst storms likely wouldn’t be present, the forecaster­s said Thursday.

The National Weather Service said a tornado with winds between 60 and 110 mph struck an apartment complex in southweste­rn Houston on Wednesday morning, damaging carports, windows and roofs. No injuries were reported following the tornado, rated as an EF-0 or an EF-1 on a six-level scale of tornado damage. Later Wednesday, damaging winds knocked a shipping container on a truck, injuring two near LaPorte, 20 miles east of Houston. The Port of Houston said it didn’t know if a twister was to blame.

Fire officials in Fort Worth said Wednesday that two boys, ages 11 and 12, were electrocut­ed by power lines downed during the violent weather.

In Oklahoma, a truck driver was killed Tuesday night after strong winds pushed his rig off the interstate in El Reno, outside Oklahoma City, according to the Oklahoma Highway Patrol. Forecaster­s confirmed a 95 mph wind gust in the area when the crash occurred.

In Texas, the three storm chasers — including two who were contractor­s for the Weather Channel — were killed in a collision at a remote intersecti­on near the town of Spur, about 55 miles southeast of Lubbock.

In the West, a storm was expected to continue to make significan­t progress inland. Rain and high-country snow will expand from Washington and Oregon to Idaho, Nevada, Utah, Wyoming and southweste­rn Montana. Gusty, locally damaging winds were likely to whip around the storm across California, Nevada and Arizona.

 ?? Rose Baca / Dallas Morning News ?? John Hampton stands outside his brother’s house damaged by a powerful storm in Rockwall, Texas, on Wednesday.
Rose Baca / Dallas Morning News John Hampton stands outside his brother’s house damaged by a powerful storm in Rockwall, Texas, on Wednesday.

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