Storms bring rain, damage, blackouts
Posted: Sat Jul 16, 2005 11:15 am
By BRAD WATSON / WFAA ABC 8
TERRELL, Texas — Friday afternoon brought a dramatic end to a week of wet weather in North Texas.
The rush hour rainfall inundated almost every city, town and suburb surrounding Dallas. TXU said about 30,000 customers—most of them in Plano, Richardson, and parts of Northeast Dallas—were without power Friday night as a result of weather-related problems.
In Terrell, about 40 miles east of Dallas, a powerful storm cell hit town about 4:30 p.m. bringing wind gusts up to 50 mph, knocking the roofs from about a half dozen buildings, police said.
As employees of the Terrell Feed Store looked over damaged equipment and soggy feed bags, they felt fortunate about their decision to flee to the safety of the office when the storm hit.
"A neighbor called and said, 'Your roof just blew off!'" feed store worker Derek Cameron recalled. "He wasn't kidding. I walked out here, the roof was off. There's a heck of a lot of damage."
A few blocks away, Clay White, the owner of the Stop and Go Car Wash, looked over a similar scene. His roof flipped over on a neighboring animal clinic.
"I noticed something didn't look right and so we drove over here and noticed that we had all this damage to the car wash," White said. "Some kind of natural disaster or something."
At the A&M Mini Warehouse across the street, the Huff family examined the now-ruined household belongings they had been storing while remodeling their home.
"We still have some stuff in the house, but I feel like it's a great loss," said Roddie Huff. "But—you know—no one was hurt, and that's a blessing in itself."
Randy Childress also feels grateful. As high winds kicked up, he felt a thump on his roof. "I thought that maybe the tree was going to fall through the house," he said. "Fortunately, it didn't; it just fell on the roof."
Terrell police said despite the force of the storms, no one was hurt.
WFAA-TV's Dan Ronan in Dallas contributed to this report.
WFAA ABC 8
A Terrell feed store warehouse lost its roof in the storm.
WFAA ABC 8
High winds blew the roof off a Terrell storage facility.
TERRELL, Texas — Friday afternoon brought a dramatic end to a week of wet weather in North Texas.
The rush hour rainfall inundated almost every city, town and suburb surrounding Dallas. TXU said about 30,000 customers—most of them in Plano, Richardson, and parts of Northeast Dallas—were without power Friday night as a result of weather-related problems.
In Terrell, about 40 miles east of Dallas, a powerful storm cell hit town about 4:30 p.m. bringing wind gusts up to 50 mph, knocking the roofs from about a half dozen buildings, police said.
As employees of the Terrell Feed Store looked over damaged equipment and soggy feed bags, they felt fortunate about their decision to flee to the safety of the office when the storm hit.
"A neighbor called and said, 'Your roof just blew off!'" feed store worker Derek Cameron recalled. "He wasn't kidding. I walked out here, the roof was off. There's a heck of a lot of damage."
A few blocks away, Clay White, the owner of the Stop and Go Car Wash, looked over a similar scene. His roof flipped over on a neighboring animal clinic.
"I noticed something didn't look right and so we drove over here and noticed that we had all this damage to the car wash," White said. "Some kind of natural disaster or something."
At the A&M Mini Warehouse across the street, the Huff family examined the now-ruined household belongings they had been storing while remodeling their home.
"We still have some stuff in the house, but I feel like it's a great loss," said Roddie Huff. "But—you know—no one was hurt, and that's a blessing in itself."
Randy Childress also feels grateful. As high winds kicked up, he felt a thump on his roof. "I thought that maybe the tree was going to fall through the house," he said. "Fortunately, it didn't; it just fell on the roof."
Terrell police said despite the force of the storms, no one was hurt.
WFAA-TV's Dan Ronan in Dallas contributed to this report.

WFAA ABC 8
A Terrell feed store warehouse lost its roof in the storm.

WFAA ABC 8
High winds blew the roof off a Terrell storage facility.