Tornadoes kill 7-yr old girl & hit AL school - 8 deaths

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Tornadoes kill 7-yr old girl & hit AL school - 8 deaths

#1 Postby southerngale » Thu Mar 01, 2007 3:57 pm

:(

Tornadoes Kill 7-Year-Old Missouri Girl, Strike Alabama High School

Thursday, March 01, 2007
Associated Press

CAULFIELD, Mo. — A tornado struck southern Missouri, killing a 7-year-old girl and damaging homes and businesses Thursday, and another apparent twister struck an Alabama high school, authorities said.

Students were inside Enterprise High School at the time, and there were early reports of injuries, state and weather officials said. Police were trying to determine if any students were trapped, state Rep. Terry Spicer said.

The school "appears to have been right in the path," said Paul Duval, meteorologist with National Weather Service in Tallahassee, Fla., which monitors southeast Alabama.

"What we have learned so far is that there are injuries both in downtown Enterprise and the high school," he said.

Click here for FOXNews.com's Natural Disaster center.

In Missouri, Howell County Sheriff Robbie Crites identified the young victim as Elizabeth Croney. Her mother, father and two brothers were injured when a tornado hit their mobile home in a rural wooded area near West Plains, Crites said.

In Caulfield, Rick Jarvis heard the storm ripping through his gas station around dawn. His home next door suffered just minor damage, but the twister shredded the business, ripping down its roof and back wall.

"It sounded like a herd of horses tearing up stuff. When I came out, it was done," said Jarvis, 48.

At least four mobile homes, two houses and two service stations in Caulfield were damaged when the twisters hit around 6:30 a.m., and a tornado also touched down near an elementary school in Caulfield. Two more tornadoes were also reported in the area, said Mike Wade, a dispatcher at the Howell County Sheriff's Office.

The burst of tornadoes was part of a larger line of thunderstorm and snowstorms that stretched from Minnesota to Louisiana. In Nebraska, strong wind and heavy snow caused whiteout conditions in eastern Nebraska that forced the shutdown of 75 miles of Interstate 80.

Tornado watches issued Thursday morning across Alabama led several school systems to close or dismiss students early. It wasn't immediately clear whether Enterprise was one of them.

Spicer said local officials reported there was significant damage to the school, with the gym's roof heavily damaged.

In Kansas' Linn County, along the Missouri state line, a tornado Wednesday night destroyed a power substation, and roofs and siding were torn from buildings, Linn County Emergency Management Director David Yates said. He said some minor injuries were reported.

The storm also ripped out poles and electric lines, but power was expected to be restored by the end of the day, said Paul Norris, operations manager for Heartland Rural Electric Cooperative.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,255698,00.html
Last edited by southerngale on Sat Mar 03, 2007 2:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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#2 Postby southerngale » Thu Mar 01, 2007 4:06 pm

Apparently, there are students and faculty trapped. There are many injuries as well. A reporter said that it looked like a bomb had hit. The buses that were lined up to take the kids home were either flipped upside down or demolished.

A hospital was hit too and they're evacuating patients to another hospital.
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#3 Postby Lindaloo » Thu Mar 01, 2007 5:23 pm

That poor little girl. :(

According to the article that high school was in the direct path. Can you imagine? :( I am trying to find other links to that area, but nothing so far.
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#4 Postby artist » Thu Mar 01, 2007 5:31 pm

live weather coverage with some from the high school -

http://www.nbc13.com/gulfcoastwest/vtm/ ... -0009.html
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#5 Postby Brent » Thu Mar 01, 2007 5:32 pm

8 dead in Enterprise at the school, and I think it will go much higher. These are some of the worst reports I've seen.
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#6 Postby Brent » Thu Mar 01, 2007 5:50 pm

AP reports 13 dead statewide. We already know 1 was killed in Wilcox County(which seems to be another significant tornado).
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#7 Postby artist » Thu Mar 01, 2007 7:43 pm

there will be a news conference shortly from Enterprise High School at this link - look at the top of the page for the live coverage link-
http://www.wsfa.com
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#8 Postby Tstormwatcher » Thu Mar 01, 2007 8:49 pm

Death toll up to 18 including 15 at school
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#9 Postby Stephanie » Thu Mar 01, 2007 9:02 pm

This season is getting started MUCH too early!

How very sad. I hope that they can get the students and teachers that are trapped out soon.
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#10 Postby Lindaloo » Thu Mar 01, 2007 9:08 pm

From what I can see this was a very wide tornado and the school was directly in it's path.
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#11 Postby Miss Mary » Fri Mar 02, 2007 7:50 am

Truly heartbreaking. You often hear of tornado touchdowns, mere minutes or hours after a school was filled to capacity but miracurously the tornado comes thru after students are safely home. Not this time - which just breaks your heart.

Prayers going out to those injured and families of those that perished.

:-(

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#12 Postby pojo » Fri Mar 02, 2007 2:44 pm

School death total now up to 15.... that is gutwrenching.
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#13 Postby southerngale » Fri Mar 02, 2007 8:42 pm

Such a horrible tragedy. I can't imagine what the parents of those injured and deceased are going through. There's nothing worse than losing a child. :( And even worse, I'm sure some of them are dealing with guilt for not checking their kids out. Many kids were checked out by their parents after the first warnings had passed. They couldn't have known the school would be hit, but guilt doesn't work that way. "If only I had..." I just can't imagine. :cry:

Tornadoes' Death Toll Rises to 20


Mar 2, 2:32 PM (ET)
By STEPHEN MAJORS


ENTERPRISE, Ala. (AP) - A violent storm system ripped apart an Alabama high school as students hunkered inside and later tore through Georgia, hitting a hospital and raising the death toll Friday to at least 20 across the Midwest and Southeast.

Eight students died when a tornado struck Enterprise High School, Mayor Kenneth Boswell said Friday. The teenage victims were all in a wing of the school that took a direct hit as the tornado blew out the walls and roof.

"It was in a split second that we sat down and started to cover ourselves before the storm hit," said 17-year-old Kira Simpson, who lost four friends to the storm. "Glass was breaking. It was loud."

"It's like a bad dream. I have to keep reminding myself that it actually happened," she said.

As the massive storm system swept into Georgia, another tornado apparently touched down near the Sumter Regional Hospital in Americus, 117 miles south of Atlanta, blowing out the windows, tossing cars into trees and killing at least two people, said Buzz Weiss of the Georgia Emergency Management Agency.

Doctors, nurses and volunteers had worked into the night to evacuate dozens of patients.

"It was controlled chaos," said Dr. Tim Powell, an anesthesiologist.

Six more people were killed in the town of Newton, Ga., including a child, and several homes were destroyed, Fire Chief Andy Belinc said early Friday.

"It's just a blessing, frankly, that we didn't have more fatalities than we did," Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue said after viewing the damage Friday. He declared a state of emergency in six counties, clearing the way for state aid.


The burst of tornadoes was part of a larger line of thunderstorms and snowstorms that stretched from Minnesota to the Gulf Coast. Authorities blamed tornadoes for the deaths of a 7-year-old girl in Missouri, 10 people in Alabama and nine in Georgia, and twisters also damaged homes in Kansas.

President Bush planned to visit two of the storm-damaged areas on Saturday, the White House said. The destinations were still being worked out Friday with governors in the affected states.

As the storm swept out to sea off South Carolina on Friday, the Coast Guard suspended a search for six boaters, saying a distress call during the storm late Thursday that their small craft was taking on water was likely a hoax. No debris or evidence of a boat was found.

In all, the National Weather Service received 31 reports of tornadoes Thursday from Missouri, Illinois, Alabama, Georgia and Florida, plus a report Friday of a waterspout near Cartaret, N.C.

The normal peak tornado season is April and May, but weather service meteorologist Dennis Feltgen said tornadoes can occur at any time.

At Enterprise High School, officials had been watching the storm Thursday as it swept through southern Missouri and headed into Alabama. The students were preparing to leave for the day when the sirens started up and the lights went out.

Teacher Grannison Wagstaff was with them.

"I said 'Here it comes. Hit the deck," he told CBS's "The Early Show" Friday. "I turned around and I could actually see the tornado coming toward me."

A section of roof and a wall near 17-year-old senior Erin Garcia collapsed on her classmates.

"I was just sitting there praying the whole time," Erin said. "It sounded like a bunch of people trying to beat the wall down. People didn't know where to go. They were trying to lead us out of the building.


"I kept seeing people with blood on their faces."

Outside, debris from the school was strewn around the neighborhood, where cars were flipped or tossed atop each other. Searchers pulled the final body, a boy, from the high school's wreckage around 1:30 a.m. Friday, assistant superintendent Bob Phares said.

Phares said it appeared that when the wall collapsed in the storm, the concrete slab ceiling came straight down on the students.

School officials had moved all the students into the interior halls after the first warnings were issued around 10:30 a.m. by the National Weather Serivce, Phares said. A "significant number" of students were checked out by their parents after that. The school planned to send the rest of the students home at 1 p.m., but then a new warning surfaced, so that was delayed to 1:30 p.m., he said. The storm hit around 1:15 p.m.


Gov. Bob Riley on Friday defended the school officials' actions after touring the area.


"I think they saved a lot of lives," Riley said. "I told the principal, 'You can do everything exactly right and have this happen.'"

Mayor Boswell said officials had yet to determine where the school's students would attend classes for the rest of the year.

He appeared drained as his staff and National Guard crews tried to assess the damage in torn-up neighborhoods. At least one other person was killed in Enterprise, a city of about 23,000 some 75 miles south of Montgomery. Another died across the state in rural Millers Ferry, where trailer homes were flipped and trees toppled, officials said.

In Sumter County, Ga., home of former President Jimmy Carter, Sumter Regional Hospital was in shambles Friday morning. Officials weren't sure whether the people injured and the two reported dead in town were inside the hospital when the storm struck, Weiss said.

Near Newton, about 50 miles to the south, Marvin Hurst was home with his wife and 31-year-old son when the storm hit and the house "exploded." Only a few sections of rear wall were left standing.

"It's just by the grace of God that we got out," Hurst said.

Between 40 and 60 homes were also damaged in nearby Clay County, on the Alabama line, Weiss said. Another tornado killed a man in a mobile home in Taylor County, north of Americus, county Emergency Management Agency Director Gary Lowe said.

Around Americus, the storm uprooted trees and knocked down power lines. Several homes and businesses were destroyed. At Cheek Memorial Church, the wooden steeple had toppled.

Marcia Wilson, who lives across the street from the Church, said she heard a huge roar as the storm went through.

"It felt like the whole house was fixing to fall in," she said. "All I could do was pray that God take care of us and he did."

---

Associated Press Writers Greg Bluestein in Americus, Ga., and Elliot Minor in Newton, Ga., contributed to this report.

http://apnews.excite.com/article/200703 ... 7O7G0.html





Ala. School Warned Hours Before Tornado


Mar 2, 7:57 PM (ET)
By JAY REEVES


ENTERPRISE, Ala. (AP) - Administrators at a high school where eight students died in a tornado were warned about severe weather nearly three hours before the twister struck, raising questions Friday about whether classes should have been dismissed earlier.

Residents of the neighborhood surrounding Enterprise High School said they heard warning sirens long before the tornado slammed into the building, crushing the victims in an avalanche of concrete and metal.

"It came real fast, but they had plenty of time to get those kids out because sirens were going off all morning," said Pearl Green, whose 15-year-old niece attends the school and was hit in the head by a flying brick.

But school officials said they had no chance to evacuate earlier because of the approaching severe weather. And others said the carnage would have been greater if students had been outside or on the road when the storm hit.

Gov. Bob Riley defended administrators' actions after a tour of the school.

"I don't know of anything they didn't do," Riley said after stepping out of the collapsed hallway where the students died. "If I had been there, I hope I would have done as well as they did."

The last of the bodies were removed Friday.

"Each one who was brought out, somebody would say, 'That was a good kid,'" said Bob Phares, assistant superintendent.

The students were among 20 people killed Thursday in Alabama, Georgia and Missouri by tornadoes contained in a line of thunderstorms that stretched from Minnesota to the Gulf Coast. The storms damaged or destroyed hundreds of homes, toppled trees and knocked down power lines. In Enterprise, a town of 22,000 people, more than 50 people were hurt.


President Bush planned to visit two of the storm-damaged areas Saturday. The destinations were still being worked out Friday with governors in the affected states.

Warning sirens began blaring in Enterprise about 10:30 a.m. Thursday, prompting school officials to order the high school's 1,200 students into interior halls - supposedly the safest part of the building.

Many students left school after the initial warnings, and administrators decided to dismiss classes at 1 p.m., before the worst of the weather was forecast to hit, Phares said.

But with hundreds of students still huddled inside the school, emergency management officials warned that a possible twister was on the way and advised school officials to hold students until 1:30 p.m., Phares said.

"The storm hit about 1:15," he said. A wall in one hall collapsed, and the concrete slab roof fell on the victims.

Brittany Ammons, 18, left school about 10 minutes before the tornado struck. She said students in the halls could hear the sirens, but no one panicked.

"We weren't really worried because we're always hearing sirens for bad weather," Ammons said.

Looking at the remains of their school, Ammons and three classmates wondered whether students should have been sent home after the first warnings were issued. But senior Charles Strickland said the carnage would have been far worse if students were trying to leave school during the storm.

"If they'd let us out, they'd be looking at 50 to 300 dead," Strickland said. He pointed to a parking lot full of students' vehicles that were thrown around by the twister, with some coming to rest against the building.

"Imagine those kids in the parking lot sitting in those cars," English teacher Beverly Thompson said.

Mitch Edwards, spokesman for the Alabama Board of Education, said the state has a plan requiring schools to conduct weather drills and review safety plans. But the decision on whether to close schools is left to superintendents and principals.

"It's a situation where local superintendents and principals are in position to make the best call," Edwards said. "They try to react based on the best information available."

---

Associated Press writer Stephen Majors contributed to this story.

http://apnews.excite.com/article/200703 ... CGJO0.html
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#14 Postby Lindaloo » Fri Mar 02, 2007 9:19 pm

I believe the school did everything they were supposed to. I mean, there is no safe place except underground with a direct hit.
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#15 Postby Stephanie » Sat Mar 03, 2007 1:09 pm

I agree Lindaloo. Can you imagine the fall-out if they did let those students go and the tornado struck?
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#16 Postby baygirl_1 » Sat Mar 03, 2007 5:55 pm

I really detest that news article about "what if" they'd dismissed earlier. It's a terrible situation in Enterprise and playing the "what if" game does not make it any better. Dismissing school early is not an easy or quick procedure. Bus drivers have to be located and the news media has to be notified in order to notify parents of the early dismissal. We've dismissed early when it has started snowing and it took approximately 1 to 1 1/2 hours to arrange things once the decision was made by the superintendent. (Granted, that was not the same as the urgency of a tornado. However, down here, if we don't get home soon, we won't because we have no equipment to clear ice and snow off the roads.) It's my understanding from talking with co-workers who have family in the Enterprise area that the high school and other schools were in the process of dismissing early. Unfortunately, the storm moved in right at the time they were dismissing. Thank goodness it didn't happen 5-10 min. later: the students would've been on the buses and in the cars. The teachers and administrators had the students in the tornado drill position when the tornado hit. Very few places in South Alabama have basements. We go in the hallway, against the wall and away from doors and windows. Students are told to cover their heads with a book or something to protect them. Many schools in our area were in tornado drill on Thurs. during the storms. Sadly, Enterprise took a direct hit and the buildings just couldn't withstand it. It is a teacher's nightmare. At least, it's this teacher's nightmare. I can imagine few things worse than that happening at school. My prayers are with all of those affected: victims, families, teachers, and administrators. They have a monumental task ahead of them.
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#17 Postby Ptarmigan » Sat Mar 03, 2007 11:18 pm

Letting the students out before the tornado is a very bad idea and not proper storm procedure. It is best they hide away from the windows into the center of the building.
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#18 Postby southerngale » Sat Mar 03, 2007 11:35 pm

Ptarmigan wrote:Letting the students out before the tornado is a very bad idea and not proper storm procedure. It is best they hide away from the windows into the center of the building.
Well, I don't think anyone is/was suggesting they let them out as the tornado hit. Of course you always go to the hallways or in closets, away from windows and doors. I think the people who are questioning whether the school should have dismissed classes earlier were doing so because the school had been warned of severe weather nearly three hours earlier.

My prayers go out to all the victims. :(
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#19 Postby Miss Mary » Sun Mar 04, 2007 9:34 am

baygirl_1 wrote:I really detest that news article about "what if" they'd dismissed earlier. It's a terrible situation in Enterprise and playing the "what if" game does not make it any better. Dismissing school early is not an easy or quick procedure. Bus drivers have to be located and the news media has to be notified in order to notify parents of the early dismissal. We've dismissed early when it has started snowing and it took approximately 1 to 1 1/2 hours to arrange things once the decision was made by the superintendent. (Granted, that was not the same as the urgency of a tornado. However, down here, if we don't get home soon, we won't because we have no equipment to clear ice and snow off the roads.) It's my understanding from talking with co-workers who have family in the Enterprise area that the high school and other schools were in the process of dismissing early. Unfortunately, the storm moved in right at the time they were dismissing. Thank goodness it didn't happen 5-10 min. later: the students would've been on the buses and in the cars. The teachers and administrators had the students in the tornado drill position when the tornado hit. Very few places in South Alabama have basements. We go in the hallway, against the wall and away from doors and windows. Students are told to cover their heads with a book or something to protect them. Many schools in our area were in tornado drill on Thurs. during the storms. Sadly, Enterprise took a direct hit and the buildings just couldn't withstand it. It is a teacher's nightmare. At least, it's this teacher's nightmare. I can imagine few things worse than that happening at school. My prayers are with all of those affected: victims, families, teachers, and administrators. They have a monumental task ahead of them.


I agree. This school was caught between a rock and hard place. One student was quoted as saying if they had let students out early (high school students who often drive their own car to school), many would have been sitting in their cars as the tornado touched down. The aftermath proves cars were tossed around like toys. No doubt that would have been a very dangerous situation. If I had been a school administrator, the choice between allowing driving age students out early, picturing them in the parking lot or on the roads hurrying home to safety OR safe inside the school, the decision would have been an easy one. I don't anyone imagined the school would have taken a direct hit.

This is a very sad situation all around but if I lived in that community, there is no way I'd ever blame the school admin.'s decisions to hold students.

Mary
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#20 Postby Lindaloo » Sun Mar 04, 2007 12:16 pm

[font=Lucida Console]From what I read, the school was dismissing early, then they received the first tornado warning. After that threat passed, the kids began leaving again. During that dismissal there was the second warning and they all went to the hall again. We all know the outcome of the second warning. I am just thankful that most of the student body (1200 students) left before the second warning was issued. IMO, the school did exactly what they were supposed to. Just think during the second warning if those students would have been dismissed and in all those tossed cars and school buses.[/font]
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