Santa Fe New Mexican

Residents assess damage after tornadoes hit Midwest

- By Nick Ingram, Jeff Martin and Heather Hollingswo­rth

OMAHA, Neb. — Residents began sifting through the rubble Saturday after a tornado plowed through suburban Omaha, demolishin­g homes and businesses as it moved for miles through farmland and into subdivisio­ns, then slamming an Iowa town.

Dozens of reported tornadoes wreaked havoc Friday in the Midwest, causing a building to collapse with dozens of people inside and destroying and damaging at least 150 homes in Omaha alone.

But no fatalities were reported, and fewer than two dozen people were treated at Omaha-area hospitals, said Dr. Lindsay Huse, health director of the city’s Douglas County Health Department.

“Miraculous” she said, stressing that none of the city’s injuries were serious. Neighborin­g communitie­s reported a handful of injuries each.

The tornado damage started Friday afternoon near Lincoln, Neb. An industrial building in Lancaster County was hit, causing it to collapse with 70 people inside. Several were trapped, but everyone was evacuated, and the three injuries were not life-threatenin­g, authoritie­s said.

One or possibly two tornadoes then spent around an hour creeping toward Omaha, leaving behind damage consistent with an EF3 twister, with winds of 135 to 165 mph, said Chris Franks, a meteorolog­ist in the National Weather Service’s Omaha office.

Ultimately the twister slammed into the Elkhorn neighborho­od in western Omaha, a city of 485,000 people with a metropolit­an-area population of about 1 million.

Staci Roe surveyed the damage to what was supposed to be her “forever home,” which was not even two years old. When the tornado hit, they were at the airport picking up a friend who was supposed to spend the night.

“There was no home to come to,” she said, describing “utter dread” when she saw it for the first time.

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