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  • Updated
    18
    Apr
    2013
    11:30pm, EDT

    State of emergency in Illinois deadly storms rock Midwest

    Much of the Midwest has been affected by a big spring storm that left flooding in Illinois. Residents in Gurnee, Ill., said it's the worst flooding they've seen in a decade and officials are warning it could be a week or two before flood levels significantly drop.  NBC's John Yang report.

    By Jeff Black and Alastair Jamieson, NBC News

    A massive and deadly weather system carrying potentially severe thunderstorms, damaging winds and possibly even tornadoes was soaking the nation’s midsection on Thursday, with flash floods reported in Chicago and heavy rain expected to cause major flooding along the Mississippi River.

    The weather was said to be responsible for two deaths.

    Minnesota State Police say 16-year-old Jonathon Pohlen of Houlton, Wis., was killed Thursday afternoon when he lost control on snowy Interstate 94 in eastern Minnesota, crossed over the median and collided with a truck's trailer.

    The National Weather Service in Chanhassen says the storm could dump up to a foot of snow in northeastern Minnesota by Friday.

    Meanwhile, flash floods are being blamed for the death of an 80-year-old motorist south of St. Louis.

    Police in De Soto say the woman's car was swept Thursday off Highway E into Joachim Creek.

    And flooding in the Chicago area — with more than 4 inches of rain reported — closed major expressways and led the evacuations of residents stuck in flooded homes, apartments and a hospital.

    /

    Firefighter Jason Kelley and police officer Shannon Vandenheuvel carry children from Barbara Jones' partially submerged car in Grand Rapids, Mich., on Thursday.

    The deluge caused a water main break on Chicago's South Side and the gushing water opened up a sinkhole that swallowed three cars.

    Parts of the Edens and Eisenhower expressways in Lake County, Ill., were closed in both directions at one point during the day, NBCChicago.com reported.  

    Gov. Pat Quinn declared a state of emergency across Illinois as thousands of people struggled with flood damage even as another wave of wet weather was on the way.

    Quinn said a hospital in Morris, Ill., had to be evacuated and two trailer parks severely flooded. Residents living in The Towers at Four Lakes, a large apartment complex in a suburban area west of Chicago, were rescued from their flooded homes by boat, the DuPage County Sheriff's office said.

    NewsNation's Tamron Hall reports on the massive storm which called flash flooding in Chicago.

    Ajay Jha his wife Alo and daughter Aditi had to be evacuated through an open window of their home in Lisle by boat after a branch of the DuPage River overflowed.

    "We lost everything" Ajay told the Chicago Tribune. “You can’t stop mother nature. We’re just happy we are safe.”

    Illinois' governor warned people of the hazards of travel.

    "Heavy rainfall over the past few days has created dangerous flooding in areas across the state," Quinn said, NBCChicago.com reported. "Everyone should stay home and off the roads if possible. To ensure safety as these storms continue, people should be alert and avoid flooded areas."

    Residents were told to tune in to local TV and radio stations for updated information about any closed roadways or evacuations.

    Heavy rain caused a sinkhole in Chicago that swallowed three cars. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    More than 500 flights were canceled at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport due to the extreme weather, and some trains were delayed. Air travelers were urged to check airline websites or call to confirm whether flights were still planned.

    In Midland, Mich., Northwood University canceled classes for the rest of the week because of flooding problems, NBC station WDIV reported.

    The Weather Channel's Greg Forbes, a severe weather expert, categorized the storm as a “major/massive flood event” for the Midwest.

    Flood watches and warnings were posted on Thursday stretching from northeastern Oklahoma to much of Missouri, northern and central Illinois, southern and central Wisconsin, and parts of Lower Michigan, Weather.com said.

    Flood warnings were issued in some cases for areas already swamped by melting snow.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Seventeen gauges placed along the Mississippi River to monitor the rising water already showed major flooding, Forbes said, and the water was predicted to rise in the next 24 hours in Missouri, Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin and Michigan.

    Indeed, the band of predicted extreme weather stretched from northern Michigan to Houston and the Texas coastal area.

    States along the Eastern Seaboard were set for heavy rain on Friday, Weather.com reported. The tornado risk, however, was expected to diminish as the storm moved east. Still, heavy rain was likely in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and the New York metropolitan area as well as the Atlantic Coast.

    A forecast issued late Wednesday by the National Weather Service showed a 40 percent chance that the Red River will top the 2009 record of just under 41 feet.

    Fargo City Administrator Pat Zavoral said he's confident the area will be protected. He said a forecast closer to 44 feet would have made things "a little dicey."

    The Associated Press contributed to this story

    Related:

    Wild spring weather snarls parts of country

    This story was originally published on Thu Apr 18, 2013 11:31 PM EDT

    163 comments

    Flood warnings are in effect across several Midwestern states through Thursday night after a severe weather system brought storms and torrential rain, in some cases battering areas already swamped by melting snow.

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    Explore related topics: weather, flood, rain, storms, tornadoes, us-news, featured, severe-weather, updated
  • 30
    Jan
    2013
    7:04pm, EST

    Tornado rips through Georgia city as storms wreak havoc in the South

    Tornadoes ripped through four states Wednesday, killing at least two, as a cold front clashed with warm air, producing unusual weather patterns over a large part of the country. The Weather Channel's Julie Martin reports.

    By John Newland and Andrew Mach, NBC News

    Updated at 9 p.m. ET: Severe thunderstorms continued to threaten Wednesday night along a multi-state line stretching from the Southeast to as far north as the nation's capital, according to The Weather Channel.

    The National Weather Service issued tornado watches across large swaths of Georgia, as well as parts of Maryland, Virginia, the District of Columbia, the Carolinas and northwest Florida, through Wednesday night. The Weather Channel warned of thunderstorms with spotty, damaging gusts and low chance of tornado in northeastern Florida and on the east side of the Florida panhandle.   

    Thirteen tornadoes were confirmed to have blown through the South on Tuesday and Wednesday, according to The Weather Channel -- they touched down in Missouri, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Mississippi and Illinois on Tuesday and Indiana, Tennessee and Georgia on Wednesday.

    Earlier Wednesday, a violent tornado that ripped through Adairsville, Ga., killed at least one person, overturned cars, littered Interstate 75 with debris and forced officials to shut down a 10-mile stretch of the road, officials said.

    Read more at weather.com

    Numerous buildings in nearby Bartow, Ga., some with people inside, were also damaged in the powerful storm, and police have received multiple calls of injuries and trauma, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported.

    A man was killed in the state when the tornado hit his mobile home, Bartow County officials said.

    Eight people went to the hospital with injuries following the storm, officials at Gordon Hospital in Calhoun, Ga., said. The storm also left at least 12,400 without power statewide, utilities providers said.


    That twister was only one of a handful that touched down in the South and the Midwest Wednesday, as storms throughout the region caused widespread power outages, structural damages and were blamed for another death in the region.

    The National Weather Service also confirmed another twister touched down in Sardis, Miss., heavily damaging homes in Solsberry, Ind.

    Earlier, a 47-year-old man in Nashville, Tenn., was killed when a tree fell on a shed he was in, according to local fire department officials.

    Amateur video taken from inside a Food Lion store captures a tornado as it tears through Adairsville, Georgia. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Meanwhile, in Monticello, Ark., a woman was struck by lightning late Tuesday but only had minor injuries, according to police, and a 32-year-old woman and a 7-year-old boy were treated for minor injuries in Marion County, Ky., the emergency management division reported.

    Packing quarter-size hail and powerful winds, the storms also knocked out power to thousands of people throughout the region early Wednesday.

    In Memphis, Tenn., more than 13,000 customers lost power as high winds tore down power lines and at least two tornado warnings were issued in the area, but later expired, according to the National Weather Service.

    And more than 7,300 Nashville customers were without power, according to Nashville Electric. Utilities reported another 8,000 outages in Arkansas, 7,000 in Mississippi, and nearly 12,000 in Indiana.

    In Arlington, Tenn., downed power lines sparked a fast-spreading grass fire that caused the evacuation of a small mental-health facility, Arlington Fire Department Lt. Chad Wiseman said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "The wind was pushing everything really fast," Wiseman said, adding that gusts reached 50 mph as the fire was burning. "The wind feeds everything. The wind will turn a little grass fire into something that was shooting 15- or 20-foot flames in the air. It looked pretty scary."

    The fire was brought under control within an hour, officials said.

    A number of factors have helped build the storm system, according to meteorologists. Unseasonably warm, wet air has been pushed up from the Gulf of Mexico by southerly winds, and that is being met by cold air coming in from the Plains via Canada, The Weather Channel’s Chad Burke said, adding that the cold air is being driven eastward by unusually high winds.

    "It's not a normal pattern for this time of year," said Burke. "The warm air has changed the dynamic. On the back end of the storm, you have high temperatures in the 50s and 60s in places like Chicago. By tomorrow night, they'll be at 11 (degrees)."

    NBC staff writers Vignesh Ramachandran and Isolde Raftery contributed reporting.

    The Weather Channel's Jim Cantore joins Brian Williams to discuss the severe weather that has taken a hold of large swaths of the country this week.

    240 comments

    The seasons in Oklahoma have moved up by about a month; Monday our temps were reaching upward of 70, and trees are beginning to bloom - the cedar pollen has been creating havoc on folks already trying to fight the flu. I spoke to a guy in Las Vegas Monday and he said the temps there were in the low  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, louisville, tornadoes, memphis, featured, nashville, southeast, severe-weather
  • 10
    Jan
    2013
    7:07pm, EST

    Louisiana governor declares state of emergency as storm drenches region

    Abby Tabor / AP

    Vehicles drive through floodwaters on Canal Boulevard in Thibodaux, La., Jan. 10. Gov. Bobby Jindal declared a statewide emergency Thursday after storms rolled across Louisiana, dumping huge amounts of rain and flooding some areas. The declaration lets Louisiana use state money to help local governments recover from storm damage.

    By Vignesh Ramachandran

    Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal declared a state of emergency Thursday, as the National Weather Service issued multiple flood warnings after severe weather drenched the state's southeast region.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    In addition to flooding concerns, the National Weather Service confirmed at least three tornadoes touched down in Louisiana Thursday morning: one near New Iberia, another in Breaux Bridge and a third near Plaquemine.

    "The state anticipates additional parishes will declare states of emergency and that assistance may be needed to assist the parishes in their response to this continuing threat," the declaration read.

    The state's Acadia, Avoyelles, Concordia, East Carroll, Evangeline, Livingston and St. Landry parishes also made emergency declarations, which will help prepare funds and resources for responding to flooding from the storms, WDSU reported.


    Widespread street flooding was reported in Ascension, St. James, St. John and Livingston parishes, according to WDSU.

    The Louisiana National Guard is on standby and has sent high-water trucks to some areas, according to WDSU.

    The region won't be drying out anytime soon. Another storm system is expected to bring heavy rainfall Saturday night through Monday, according to the National Weather Service.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    7 comments

    Not everyone who lives in Louisiana is a redneck. Are all people who live near you yankees? It's amazing how someone so quickly places people into a sterotype. Don't worry we would'nt dream of asking for your help. We people down here in the south are not spoiled folks who can't handle a little rain …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, louisiana, storms, state-of-emergency, severe-weather, bobby-jindal
  • 10
    Aug
    2012
    4:17pm, EDT

    Severe weather causes delays, cancellations at Northeast airports

    No injuries or damage were reported after two airplanes came in contact with each other at Washington, D.C.'s Dulles International Airport Friday. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire

    Flight delays and cancellations are growing across the East Coast's busiest airports Friday, after showers and thunderstorms continue to pound the Northeast part of the country.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    In the Washington, D.C. area, two planes clipped each other while taxing at Dulles International Airport, but the incident luckily did not affect airport operations.

    Already airports in New York City and Philadelphia are experiencing the worst of the slowdown: 154 flights canceled at LaGuardia, 72 in Philadelphia and 54 at JFK.

    Inbound flights to Newark are delayed an average of about three hours, according to FlightAware.com, and 35 flights have been canceled.

    Flights headed to JFK are delayed at their origin by about two-and-a-half hours, flights to nearby LaGuardia have two-hour delays, and arriving flights at Philadelphia International are delayed about 50 minutes, according to FlightAware. 


    Travel from the nation's capital is no better: Dulles International reported departure delays up to an hour-and-a-half. At 3:15 p.m. a Lufthansa Airbus A330 with 183 passengers en route to Frankfurt, Germany, clipped the tail of a Colgan Air turboprop flight operated by United Express and carrying 68 passengers.

    Fire crews responded to the incident and no passengers were injured, but the Lufthansa plane sustained wing damage as did the Colgan aircraft's tail. Colgan Air said in a statement that the airline is investigating the incident and is working with FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board.

    At Reagan National departures are delayed an average of 50 minutes and 31 flights have been canceled so far.

    Detroit, Atlanta and Chicago are also seeing cancellations.

    Isolated thunderstorms are expected to continue in New York City most of Friday, before forecasters say a potentially severe storm is expected to hit the area, NBC 4 New York reported. The severe weather could bring damaging winds, blinding downpours and intense cloud-to-ground lightning.

    Forecasters say the wet weather is expect to continue into Saturday.

    NBC News' Rebecca Ruiz and Vignesh Ramachandran contributed to this report.

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    29 comments

    In the Washington, D.C. area, two planes clipped each other while taxing at Dulles International Airport, but the incident luckily did not affect airport operations.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, severe-weather, flight-delays, airport-delays, commentid-featured, northeast-us
  • 15
    Mar
    2012
    8:03pm, EDT

    More than 110 homes damaged as tornado touches down near Ann Arbor, Michigan

    A series of tornadoes tore through southeastern Michigan Thursday, damaging more than 100 homes and sending people racing for cover. The Weather Channel's Mike Seidel reports.

    By msnbc.com staff, weather.com and news services

    Updated at 7:58 a.m. ET: A tornado ripped through a rural Michigan community Thursday evening, damaging or demolishing many homes, downing trees and power lines, sparking fires and flooding roads.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    A dispatcher with the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Department told Reuters that "there are homes leveled" in Dexter, which is located northwest of Ann Arbor. The Detroit Free Press linked to a YouTube video of a twister.


    Sheriff's spokesman Derrick Jackson told The Associated Press that 105 homes were significantly damaged in Dexter and the surrounding area, and 13 were destroyed.

    Washtenaw County Sheriff's Deputy Ray Yee was first on the scene when he noticed a solitary hand sticking out of the rubble of a destroyed home. He said he reached for the hand and pulled out an elderly man who was shaken but able to walk.

    "That's the best part," Yee told the AP. "Every place I went to, I would have thought I would have found somebody laying there - deceased or whatever. But, knock on wood, everybody was OK."

    Officials said around 200 people were displaced and a temporary shelter was opened at a nearby middle school. Police and fire crews were going door to door to check for any victims.

    Thunderstorm watches and warnings were in effect for several counties in southeast Michigan, said ClickOnDetroit, the website for NBC station WDIV. 

    There were multiple reports of funnel clouds and two reports of touchdowns in Monroe County, Emergency Management Director Mark Hammond said. There, a funnel cloud moved across the expressway and badly damaged one home and turned over several vehicles.

    In Washtenaw County, where Dexter is located, the tornado started as a thunderstorm watch, which turned into a thunderstorm warning, then a tornado warning – a series of warnings that extended for an hour and a half.

    Aerial footage shows at least a dozen homes were heavily damaged when a tornado touched down in Dexter, Mich.

    Marc Breckenridge, director of Emergency Management for Washtenaw County, told weather.com that there were no initial reports of injuries. "We've got public safety crews out right now being very thorough to make sure that everyone is accounted for," he added. 

    Emergency management officials told NBC News that the county is a "storm-ready community" that has invested in an outdoor weather alarm and that takes storm preparation seriously.

    Softball-sized hail
    Thunderstorms also produced softball-sized hail near Flint, Mich., weather.com reported. "We've had several large hail reports," meteorologist Amos Dodson added.

    Forecasters also issued a severe storm watch on Thursday afternoon for parts of Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee, warning of possible large hail, wind gusts of up to 70 miles an hour and dangerous lightning in a region raked by deadly tornadoes less than two weeks ago.

    In Chicago, the official temperature at O'Hare International Airport on Thursday afternoon was 79 degrees, 5 degrees above the previous record for the day, and Indianapolis topped out at 80 degrees, 3 degrees above the old record.

    In Washington, D.C., temperatures reached an all-time high, and in less than a week more than 900 new record highs have been tied or broken. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Dave Samuhel, a meteorologist at Accuweather.com said the warm air covering much of the country's midsection was helping fuel the storms the Weather Service warned about on Thursday.

    "It's just so warm that we're seeing thunderstorms pop up like popcorn the way you see it in the summertime," he said.

    'Warming up mighty early' across parts of US

    Accuweather.com said the unseasonably warm weather west of the Plains would continue into next week and spread further east into places like New York City, where residents were experiencing a more typical spring day on Thursday as winds out of the northeast kept daytime highs in the 40s.

    Weather.com, msnbc.com staff, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    49 comments

    Hope everyone has an emergency plan in place.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, tennessee, michigan, kentucky, indiana, tornado, featured, thunderstorms, severe-weather
  • 23
    Feb
    2012
    1:30pm, EST

    Dozens of homes damaged in Georgia tornado

    A twister has touched down in northwest Georgia, damaging up to 100 homes. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By msnbc.com staff

    Dozens of homes were damaged in a tornado near Rome, Ga., Wednesday night, knocking out power and forcing schools to close, local media reported, citing authorities.

    Floyd County Emergency Management Agency director Scotty Hancock said up to 100 homes suffered damage, NBC station 11alive.com reported. The storm uprooted trees and knocked down power lines across the county.


    The National Weather Service confirmed that the storm was an EF1 tornado. Hancock said a NWS team was conducting a damage survey, the station reported.

    Police said a woman in her 70s was believed to have suffered a heart attack when her home was damaged, the Atlanta Constitution Journal reported. The woman's cousins told 11alive.com that as trees began falling around her home, she began having chest pains. She called 911, but the ambulance had trouble getting to her house in the storm. She was pronounced dead at a local hospital.

    Story: Tornado chasers prepare for high season

    Thousands of northwest Georgia residents were without power early Thursday, but Georgia Power said service would be restored later in the day, 11alive.com said.

    The National Weather Service forecast warns of isolated severe thunderstorms in the region overnight.

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    60 comments

    Critic of Soc. Your comment is so well written and uses such superior intellect that it is hard to believe that your mind is a simple product of evolution. In your infinite wisdom can you explain that to someone from the south

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    Explore related topics: weather, georgia, power-outage, tornados, severe-weather, home-damage
  • 25
    Jan
    2012
    9:42am, EST

    Drivers, residents rescued from high waters in Texas

    Severe flooding has stranded many residents in Dallas area.

     

    By msnbc.com staff and NBC News

    Storms that spawned at least one tornado swept across central and east Texas on Wednesday, leading to numerous water rescues but not dropping enough rain to make up for the state's historic drought.

    Storms pounded Dallas, Houston, Austin and San Antonio overnight. Tornado warnings and watches were in effect for parts of Texas and Louisiana as the line of storms moved east.

    Record rainfall drenched the Austin area, which also saw a confirmed tornado that did some minor damage but caused no injuries.

    The downpour was celebrated in drought-stricken Washington County near Houston. Emergency management coordinator Robert Smith said the rural area's ranches finally have water and, "I think the cows are doing a jig."


    Springlike moisture from the Gulf of Mexico dropped the heaviest rainfall -- 6-8 inches -- on an area east of Austin and San Antonio along IH-35, said Mark Wiley, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Fort Worth.

    "That's very unusual for this time of year," he said. "It was just so much rain in such a short period of time. In so many areas, the ground is still fairly dry, but it was just so fast that it didn't have anywhere to go, especially in the urban areas."

    At least 13 people were rescued from high water in Cedar Creek, an hour southeast of Dallas, reported weather.com. A driver whose car was reportedly submerged on Highway 71 and residents trapped in their home by severe flooding were among those saved, the National Weather Service said.

    LM Otero / AP

    An SUV sits submerged in high water in Dallas, Texas, on Wednesday. A woman was safely rescued from the vehicle.

    In Austin, the Austin Bergstrom International Airport reported 2.79 inches of rainfall in one hour Wednesday morning, weather.com said.

    Dallas-Fort Worth Airport canceled about 30 departing flights, myFOXdfw.com reported. The widespread storms began Tuesday afternoon and continued nonstop throughout the night, delivering the heaviest amounts west of Fort Worth.

    Strong winds and scattered showers slammed the Houston area early Wednesday, knocking out power to tens of thousands of people, reported NBC affiliate KPRC. Flights were canceled there as well.

    Rains, high winds hammer Central Texas: kxan.com

    Wind gusts of 50 to 55 mph in the early-morning hours knocked down trees and power lines, cutting power to some 20,000 customers.

    Flooding is a common hazard in Houston, which got hit with severe weather on Jan. 9, when firefighters had to perform about 140 water rescues. Officials warned drivers to "turn around, not drown" if they approached rising water.

    The water rescues from this most recent bout of storms began Tuesday night, reported NBCDFW.com. Late Tuesday, firefighters rescued a motorist who had gotten trapped under a bridge in Rowlett, a suburb of Dallas.

    Texas suffered its worst single-year drought in state history in 2011. On Tuesday, a top official told state lawmakers that record wildfires last year caused as much as $11 million in damage to Texas state parks and, coupled with the drought, continue to drive down the parks' visitation rates.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    167 comments

    more rain to come. ...and hateful comments towards texas are right behind as well.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: texas, rain, floods, severe-weather, water-rescues

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