Killer Tornadoes

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Kentucky clears tornado debris; 12 children among 74 dead
Author of the article:
Reuters
Reuters
Julio-Cesar Chavez and Richa Naidu
Publishing date:
Dec 14, 2021 • 10 hours ago • 3 minute read •
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Ashley McKnight removes belonging from her damaged home in Mayfield, Kentucky, Tuesday, Dec. 14, 2021.
Ashley McKnight removes belonging from her damaged home in Mayfield, Kentucky, Tuesday, Dec. 14, 2021. Photo by CHANDAN KHANNA /AFP via Getty Images
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MAYFIELD — Clean-up crews in western Kentucky’s devastated communities on Tuesday ramped up their Herculean task of carting away mountains of debris left by last week’s killer tornadoes as survivors huddled together for warmth and support.
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In the hard-hit city of Mayfield, five families bunked together at the home of Reina Guerra Perez, swaddled in donated blankets and cooking on a fire built with scavenged wood.

“We’re cooking out back using the wood from fallen trees and keeping food warm as best we can,” she said. Her house survived, but the 26 people seeking shelter there on Tuesday had no access to running water or electricity.

The search for bodies beyond the 74 known fatalities came up empty on Tuesday. The tornadoes’ victims included more than a dozen children, Beshear said, among them a 2-month-old infant. The oldest to die was 98 years old, he said.

“I still expect that we will find some more bodies. There is just so much destruction,” Governor Andy Beshear said at a briefing, adding that more than 100 people were missing and eight victims were unidentified.
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Another 14 people died in four other states: six at an Amazon.com Inc warehouse in Illinois, four in Tennessee, two in Missouri and two in Arkansas.

More than 100 people were working at a candle factory in Mayfield, Kentucky, when the storm, which Beshear said “will probably be one of the most devastating tornado events in U.S. history,” reduced the plant to rubble. Eight people were killed, far less than initially feared.

“If you saw it in person, you would believe that’s a miracle,” Beshear said of the fact that more people were not killed.

Hundreds National Guard service members were searching for victims and survivors, clearing roads and providing police services, Beshear said.

As work crews removed the remains of levelled cities and towns one truckload at a time, the governor said the cleanup would help communities begin to heal.
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“There is something therapeutic about taking that chaos and destruction and death and getting it out of some of those areas,” said Beshear.

President Joe Biden plans to visit on Wednesday. He declared a major federal disaster in Kentucky on Sunday.

Many of the victims’ relatives started the emotionally trying ordeal of making funeral arrangements.

Carla Cope, whose 29-year-old son Clayton, a U.S. Navy veteran, was among the six Amazon workers, said the company has offered to pay for the arrangements.

An Amazon spokesman declined to confirm that the company was picking up the funeral expenses but said it was sending workers an array of supplies and services, including food and water.

U.S. workplace safety regulators are investigating the circumstances around the Amazon warehouse collapse.
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Clayton Cope loved his dog, video games and hunting and fishing with his father, his mother said.

“He was a really quirky kid with a great sense of humour and he had a lot of friends,” she said. “He drew people to him and he had a huge heart.”

The disaster has also produced an outpouring of volunteers.

At lunchtime on Tuesday, hundreds of people converged on Mayfield-Graves County Fairgrounds, where a loosely organized group of volunteers with food trucks came from hundreds of miles away to provide free meals. The area has become a magnet for a range of relief efforts.

Coordinating the lunch rush was Daniel Oxnard, 42, a student, who started things off on Saturday when he drove his van packed with food and cooking gear more than 200 miles (320 km) and served 1,000 meals. Since then, others joined in, including Amish volunteers from Tennessee, he said.
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“They come here every day with a trailer-load of food and two full griddles and they just cook their hearts out,” he said.

By Tuesday afternoon, 18,000 Kentucky homes and businesses still lacked power, according to PowerOutages.us, more than four days after the tornadoes surprised people by striking unusually late in the year. Insured losses from the swarm of tornadoes could total up to $5 billion, industry experts said on Tuesday.

More than 300 people in Kentucky, as well as in Arkansas and Tennessee, were being housed in Red Cross shelters, and that number is expected to grow. Hundreds more have been placed temporarily in resorts at area state parks, Kentucky Red Cross Chief Executive Steve Cunanan said.
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spaminator

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'Dust Bowl' winds hit tornado-devastated western United States
Author of the article:
Reuters
Reuters
Rich Mckay
Publishing date:
Dec 15, 2021 • 9 hours ago • 2 minute read •
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A cloud of dust storm is observed in Niwot, Col., Dec. 15, 2021 in this screen grab obtained from a social media video.
A cloud of dust storm is observed in Niwot, Col., Dec. 15, 2021 in this screen grab obtained from a social media video. Photo by Kirk Fischer /via REUTERS
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Less than a week after a swarm of powerful tornadoes devastated Kentucky and four other states, a freakish wind storm brought “Dust Bowl” conditions and gusts of more than 161 km/h to parts of the Great Plains and Upper Midwest, meteorologists said on Wednesday.

The low pressure wind system, driven by unseasonably high temperatures across Nebraska, Iowa and Minnesota, triggered power outages in four U.S. states, including more than 100,000 homes and businesses in Colorado by Wednesday evening.

The storm system could also pummel the region with thunderstorms and snow, the National Weather Service said in an advisory.

“There have been historic ‘Dust Bowl’ conditions with no visibility in parts of New Mexico and Colorado,” said Marc Chenard, a forecaster for the National Weather Service’s Weather Prediction Center in College Park, Maryland.
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“This is highly unusual,” Chenard said. “It’s shifting east and is unusual for this large of an area, it will be going through the Great Lakes area, Michigan and into Canada by Thursday morning,” he said.

The Dust Bowl refers to a period during the 1930s when severe drought and destructive agricultural practices disrupted the ecology of parts of U.S. and Canadian prairies. During that time, immense clouds of loosened topsoil regularly blanketed the region, leading to an economic crisis for farmers and mass migration to California.

The wind storm follows one of the deadliest tornado outbreaks in U.S. history. At least 74 people were killed in Kentucky and 14 died in other states when one of the deadliest tornado outbreaks in U.S. history swept across the Great Plains and parts of the South last Friday night and early Saturday morning.
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President Joe Biden toured devastated communities on Wednesday.

The National Weather Service said in its forecast that the high winds would pick up overnight on Wednesday and race across the Upper Midwest into Canada by Thursday.

“As a result, blowing dust and power outages will likely be found throughout the region,” the weather service said. “Extremely Critical Fire Weather also exists into this evening from the northern Texas Panhandle to north-central Kansas.”

The NWS Storm Prediction Center issued a “moderate risk” warning for the region and said blowing snow could create driving hazards across Minnesota and the Dakotas.
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