Oklahoma twisters injure 12, leave thousands without power
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[February 28, 2023]
By Brendan O'Brien
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Crews in central Oklahoma on Monday were assessing
the damage and clearing debris left behind by a string of rare February
tornadoes that roared through the area overnight, knocking out power to
thousands of customers and injuring a dozen people.
In Norman, 12 people were taken to the hospital after suffering minor
injuries in the storms that rolled through and near the city at around
11 p.m. local time on Sunday. None of the injuries were
life-threatening, Norman Chief of Police Kevin Foster said during a news
conference on Monday.
The twister was one of seven that touched down in Oklahoma and two more
were reported in Kansas overnight, the National Weather Service said.
Several homes, businesses and schools in Norman, which has about 128,000
residents, were damaged in the storms, he said.
Some 13,000 homes and businesses were without power across Oklahoma,
Poweroutage.us reported.
Video footage and photographs of the destruction on local news and
social media showed power lines lying in the middle of roadways, debris
strewn across neighborhoods and roofs ripped off buildings. One photo
showed a red sedan flipped over and resting on top of another vehicle.
"A lot of real strong wind," George Reich, a homeowner in Shawnee, a
town east of Oklahoma City, told an ABC affiliate. "Wood and debris
started flying. I jumped in the backseat of a car in the garage real
quick."
Experts say the growing frequency and intensity of such storms,
interspersed with extreme heat and dry spells, are symptoms of climate
change.
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Cars that were hit by a tornado lay in a
pile in a damaged neighborhood in Norman, Oklahoma, U.S. February
27, 2023. REUTERS/Nick Oxford
"It was pretty rare, historic in the amount" of wind shear, said
Bruce Thoren, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Norman,
regarding the Oklahoma twisters, noting that the state has seen only
51 tornadoes in February since 1950.
Four additional twisters were reported in Illinois on Monday morning
but none caused significant damage, according to online reports by
the National Weather Service.
By Monday afternoon, the service had issued several additional
tornado advisories for parts of Indiana, where they warned of strong
storms and damaging winds throughout the day.
"TAKE COVER NOW! Move to a basement or an interior room on the
lowest floor of a sturdy building," the weather service said in one
tornado warning for the Indianapolis area on Monday afternoon.
The rough weather comes after days of a winter storm clobbered the
U.S. Plains, Midwest and Great Lakes regions. More than 155,000
homes and businesses in Michigan remained without power on Monday,
Poweroutage.us reported.
Parts of California spent the weekend dealing with heavy snows in
higher elevations, rain and hail in the flatlands and frigid
temperatures in parts of the state that are known of its mild
weather.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Chicago; Editing by Angus
MacSwanand Sandra Maler)
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