Tornado kills 5 after tearing through southeastern Missouri
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[April 06, 2023]
By Brendan O'Brien and Tyler Clifford
(Reuters) -Five people were killed in a predawn tornado that ripped
through southeastern Missouri on Wednesday, shearing off roofs,
splintering trees and taking down power lines in devastated Bollinger
County, officials said.
First responders from multiple agencies combed through destroyed homes
and businesses in the rural area that Missouri Governor Mike Parson said
faces "a long journey ahead" toward recovery.
Five people were also injured and 87 structures damaged with 12 of those
buildings destroyed, said Eric Olson, superintendent of the Missouri
State Highway Patrol.
Photographs on social media from Glen Allen, Missouri - a village about
110 miles (177 km) south of St. Louis - showed severely damaged houses
with roofs torn off, downed trees and power lines and debris covering
roadways and yards.
"It's just heartbreaking to see people's homes missing roofs and their
homes gone," Missouri State Patrol Highway Sergeant Clark Parrott told
Reuters said after surveying the damage. "We got work ahead of us, but
we will get through this."
Storm spotters reported the tornado touched down in the area about 3:30
a.m. local time (0830 GMT), according to the National Weather Service,
one of more than a dozen twisters seen in the Midwest overnight.
In Marble Hill, three miles (5 km) to the east of Glen Allen, Chris
Huffman, 45, said he raced to his basement with his wife and two
daughters after hearing tornado sirens and the power went out.
Outside was pitch black and there were dark clouds, high winds and rain,
and bursts of lightning, Huffman said.
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A view of the wreckage of the Shipley
family trailer home where 5 family members died after a volatile
storm system tore through the South and Midwest on Tuesday and
Wednesday, in Glenallen, Missouri, U.S. April 5, 2023.
REUTERS/Cheney Orr
"It was startling," he told Reuters in a phone interview from his
sandwich shop, Munchies, where he was preparing food for crews and
those in need. "We heard the roar of everything. That's how close it
was."
Parson said the state would aid people who lost their homes even
though some sparsely populated communities would not have sustained
enough damage to be eligible for public disaster relief.
"This is going to be weeks upon months to be able to recover,"
Parson said, adding that President Joe Biden called to offer help
and services.
The twister struck days after violent tornadoes tore through parts
of the South and Midwest, killing at least 32 people.
A week before, a tornado devastated the Mississippi Delta town of
Rolling Fork, killing 26 people.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Chicago, Tyler Clifford in New
York, and Daniel Trotta in Carlsbad, Calif.; Editing by Sharon
Singleton, Jonathan Oatis and Josie Kao)
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