The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

At least 5 dead as states rocked by hurricane-force winds

- By Margery A. Beck and Margaret Stafford

OMAHA, NEB. » At least five people died as a powerful and extremely unusual storm system swept across the Great Plains and Midwest amid unseasonab­ly warm temperatur­es, spawning hurricane-force winds and possible tornadoes in Nebraska, Iowa and Minnesota:

• In southeaste­rn Minnesota, Olmsted County Sheriff’s Lt. Lee Rossman said a 65-year-old man was killed Wednesday night when a 40-foot tree blew onto him outside his home.

• In southweste­rn Kansas, blinding dust kicked up by the storms Wednesday led to two separate crashes that killed three people, Kansas Highway Patrol trooper Mike Racy said.

• In Iowa, a semitraile­r was struck by high winds and rolled onto its side in eastern Iowa Wednesday evening, killing the driver, the Iowa State Patrol confirmed.

The storm shifted north of the Great Lakes into Canada on Thursday, with high winds, snow and hazardous conditions continuing in the upper Great Lakes region, the National Weather Service said.

More than 400,000 homes and businesses were without electricit­y in Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa and Kansas, according to poweroutag­e.us, which tracks utility reports.

A tornado was reported in southern Minnesota on Wednesday and, if confirmed, would be the state’s first on record in December. The small community of Hartland, Minn., might have been the hardest hit, with a reported 35 to 40 homes having minor damage and a few businesses severely damaged, county Emergency Management Director Rich Hall said.

The destructiv­e weather system developed amid unpreceden­ted warmth for December in the Plains and northern states. That included temperatur­es that rose to 70 degrees across southweste­rn Wisconsin on Wednesday evening. The Weather Company historian Chris Burt compared the heat to that of a “warm July evening.”

“I can say with some confidence that this event (the heat and tornadoes) is among the most (if not THE most) anomalous weather event ever on record for the Upper Midwest,” Burt wrote in a Facebook post.

The winds knocked down trees, tree limbs and nearly 150 power lines in northern and western Michigan’s Lower Peninsula. In the western Michigan village of Fruitport, high winds peeled back a portion of Edgewood Elementary School’s roof, leading officials to close all district schools Thursday.

There were more than 20 tornado reports Wednesday in the Plains states, scattered mostly through eastern Nebraska and Iowa, based on preliminar­y reports to the Storm Prediction Center. The day also saw the most reports of hurricane-force wind gusts of 75 mph or higher of any day since 2004, the center said.

“To have this number of damaging wind storms at one time would be unusual anytime of year,” said Brian Barjenbruc­h, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Valley, Nebraska. “But to have this happen in December is really abnormal.”

The governors of Kansas and Iowa declared states of emergency.

The system came on the heels of devastatin­g tornadoes last weekend that cut a path through states including Arkansas, Missouri, Tennessee, Illinois and Kentucky, killing more than 85 people.

On Wednesday, there were at least 59 reports of hurricane-force wind gusts, which exceeded the 53 recorded on Aug. 10, 2020, when a rare derecho wind storm struck Iowa, the Storm Prediction Center said. The destructio­n on Wednesday, however, was far less severe than what Iowa saw from the 2020 derecho, which caused billions of dollars of damage.

The winds also whipped up dust that reduced visibility to zero in parts of Kansas and caused at least four semitraile­rs to blow over, leading officials to temporaril­y close much of Interstate 70, as well as all state highways in nine northweste­rn Kansas counties.

Kansas deployed helicopter­s and other firefighti­ng equipment to help smother at least a dozen wind-fueled wildfires in western and central counties, officials said Thursday.

That dust and smoke was carried north by the storm and concentrat­ed over parts of Kansas, Nebraska and Iowa, causing a dramatic drop in air quality in those areas late Wednesday. That spawned a glut of calls to already-taxed emergency dispatcher­s from people reporting the smell of smoke.

The system blew into the Plains from Colorado, sending gale-force winds across a swath from New Mexico to Minnesota, Wisconsin

and upper Michigan. The weather service recorded a gust of 107 mph Wednesday morning at Lamar, Colo., and gusts of 100 mph in Russell, Kan.

Scientists say extremewea­ther events and warmer temperatur­es are more likely to occur with human-caused climate change. However, scientific­ally attributin­g a storm system to global warming requires specific analysis and computer simulation­s that take time, haven’t been done and sometimes show no clear connection.

“I think we also need to stop asking the question of whether or not this event was caused by climate change,” said Northern Illinois University meteorolog­y professor Victor Gensini. “We need to be asking, ‘To what extent did climate change play a role and how likely was this event to occur in the absence of climate change?’”

 ?? BRYON HOULGRAVE — VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A damaged grain bin in Greene County, Iowa, on Thursday, after a band of severe weather produced strong wind gusts and reports of tornadoes across much of the state Wednesday night. The storm caused property damage and downed power lines, leaving many Iowans without electricit­y.
BRYON HOULGRAVE — VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A damaged grain bin in Greene County, Iowa, on Thursday, after a band of severe weather produced strong wind gusts and reports of tornadoes across much of the state Wednesday night. The storm caused property damage and downed power lines, leaving many Iowans without electricit­y.

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