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Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Tornado Confirmed For Damage In Cherokee County
Posted by
Edgar Treiguts
at
4/21/2009 08:11:00 AM
Labels: Cherokee County, National Weather Service, severe weather, tornado
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Nat'l Weather Svce seeks tornado evidence
Weather experts will look for evidence in a south Georgia town to determine if storm damage was caused by a tornado. A storm system Monday brought another round of severe weather to Fitzgerald where a possible twister damaged one building and toppled several irrigation systems east of the town. No injuries were reported. A storm survey will be conducted Tuesday in Ben Hill County byNational Weather Service meteorologists in Tallahassee, Fla.
(Associated Press)
Posted by
Valarie Edwards
at
4/14/2009 06:24:00 AM
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Severe storms hit; planes delayed at Hartsfield
Severe storms are sweeping across much of north Georgia, generating heavy rain, hail and winds thatdowned trees and powerlines. Flights were delayed for up to 90 minutes at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport as dark gray clouds swirled in from the west. A possible tornado was reported in northwest Georgia's Chattooga County. Meteorologists at the National Weather Service in Peachtree Citywere so busy tracking the storms that they could not immediately confirm the twister. Georgia Emergency Management Agency spokesman Ken Davis says there's a report of three possible tornadoes striking in FranklinCounty, more than a 100 miles away in northeast Georgia. Heavy storms also pelted several counties south of Atlanta.
(Associated Press)
Posted by
Valarie Edwards
at
4/11/2009 09:44:00 AM
Monday, March 16, 2009
Scientists: City, Drought Fueled Atlanta's Freak Tornado
The freak tornado that damaged downtown Atlanta last year might have been caused in part by the city itself. New research funded by NASA shows that, while the twister was spawned by a larger weather system, it also might have been made stronger by a "heat island" that surrounds Atlanta.
University of Georgia geography professor Marshall Shepherd was part of the study and says, the research could help to improve weather forecasts. "Land cover and soil moisture affect weather processes and right now many of our weather forecasting models today don't represent urban landcover or soil moisture as well as they should," Dr. Shepherd says.
The study also says, Georgia's on-going drought could have been a factor by creating what amounted to a "sea breeze" between wet and dry areas. The downtown Atlanta tornado struck almost exactly a year ago today, causing only minor injuries, but millions of dollars damage.
Posted by
Orlando Montoya
at
3/16/2009 05:15:00 PM
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Americus, Albany hospitals to merge operations

Local residents examine overturned vehicle in SRH parking lot on March 2, 2007, the morning after the tornado struck. (file/Dave Bender)
Officials at Sumter Regional Hospital in Americus have decided to lease operations to Albany's Phoebe Putney Health System.
Sumter Regional was destroyed by a tornado on March 1, 2007.
Wrecking crews demolishing Sumter Regional Hospital earlier this year. The facility was severely damaged by a twister that tore through Americus on March 1, 2007. (file/Dave Bender)
Patients have been using temporary facilities nearby, and relying on other area hospitals for more comprehensive medical services since then.
Hospital officials say Phoebe Putney will add at least $25 million dollars to rebuild SRH, and will provide core primary and emergency services, according to a report in the Albany Herald newspaper.
Both hospitals are expected to finalize the agreement by the New Year.
Click here for more GPB News coverage of the tornado, and it's effect on SRH and Americus.
Posted by
Dave
at
10/19/2008 11:52:00 PM
Labels: albany, Americus, medical care, Phoebe Putney, Sumter Regional Hospital, tornado, twister
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
FEMA to cover most of Americus hospital rebuilding

Wrecking crews demolishing Sumter Regional Hospital earlier this year. The facility was severely damaged by a twister that tore through Americus on March 1, 2007. (Dave Bender/file photo)
The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)has approved 75 percent of a $7.4 million dollar bill for rebuilding Sumter Regional Hospital in Americus, ravaged by a tornado in 2007.
The $5.5 million FEMA aid will help equip several departments, including operating rooms and cardiac care.
State and local funding is expected to cover the remainder of the cost, according to a statement from the Governor's Office.
The hospital served as the primary care facility for seven counties until it was destroyed when a twister that ripped through Americus on March first of last year.
Meanwhile, patients are using temporary facilities nearby, that opened on April 1.
Two of a series of COGIM units set up in the hospital's parking lot, which serve patients in the interim, until a permanent facility is built. (Dave Bender/file photo)
Hospital officials say they hope to break ground on a permanent structure in early 2009.
Click here for more GPB News coverage of the twister's damage to SRH and Americus.
Posted by
Dave
at
7/30/2008 01:43:00 PM
Labels: Americus, FEMA, Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue, Sumter Regional Hospital, tornado, twister
Friday, July 25, 2008
FEMA denies storm aid
Posted by
Name
at
7/25/2008 02:58:00 PM
Labels: cherokee country, FEMA, tornado, twister
Monday, June 23, 2008
Confirmed Savannah tornado last week
Posted by
Edgar Treiguts
at
6/23/2008 08:14:00 AM
Labels: National Weather Service, Savannah, storm damage, tornado
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Little Damage Reported from Cherokee County Twister
Several residents in Cherokee County were stuck inside their homes after a reported tornado touched down. The suspected twister is being blamed for damaging several homes and falling trees in the Canton neighborhood, about 30 miles north of Atlanta. A spokesman for the county issued a statement late last night saying there have been no injuries in the area. However, officials also warn many roadways are blocked due to fallen debris.
Posted by
John Sepulvado
at
5/21/2008 12:08:00 AM
Labels: Cherokee County, tornado
Monday, May 12, 2008
Macon: scenes of destruction
Photos of the twister's aftermath along Eisenhower Parkway near Pio Nono Avenue, one of Macon's business districts. (All photos: Josephine Bennet, WMUM 89.7 FM, Macon)




Thousands of Georgia residents, most in Macon, are still without power this morning in the wake of destructive storms that moved through the state early Sunday morning.
Click here for more GPB News reports about the tornado's swath of destruction through central Georgia.
Posted by
Dave
at
5/12/2008 12:16:00 PM
Labels: Macon, storm cleanup, storm damage, tornado damage, twister
Sunday, May 11, 2008
Tornadoes confirmed: state of emergency declared
At least five tornadoes hit west central, north central, and central Georgia early Sunday morning, according to the National Weather Service.
Tornadoes may have also touched down in Johnson, Treutlen, Fulton and Troup counties, according to reports.
Governor Sonny Perdue declared a state of emergency in Bibb, Carroll, Douglas, Jefferson, Johnson and Laurens counties Sunday evening.
"Last night's storms left trees downed, houses damaged and roads blocked across western and central Georgia," Perdue said.The step enables the Georgia Emergency Management Agency (GEMA) to initiate emergency operations.
"Needed state resources are being made available to assist in the cleanup efforts, and we will continue to actively work with local officials to support them"
Damaged houses on Lake Tobesofkee. (Woody Marshall, The Macon Telegraph)
"As with all disasters, GEMA will coordinate the deployment of public safety agencies, utility companies and the volunteer community to meet the needs of our citizens," GEMA Director Charley English said.
An EF2 tornado packing winds of 111 to 135 mph hit Macon between 5:45 and 6 a.m. Sunday morning, local officials said.
Laurens Co. resident Tracey Clements, was killed in his mobile home by the storm, Laurens County coroner Richard Stanley said, according to Macon.com.
Clements' wife and children sustained varying degrees of injuries when the winds flipped over their double-wide trailer, Stanley said.
Macon Mayor Robert Reichert said Perdue is expected to visit the area on Monday to assess the damage.
A tornado touched down at Macon State College's campus, causing significant damage, and uprooting or breaking about half the trees on campus, according to the National Weather Service.
The college will be closed on Monday.
Click here for more GPB News coverage of the twister and storm damage.
Posted by
Dave
at
5/11/2008 09:21:00 PM
Labels: Bibb County, Carroll, Douglas, Jefferson, Johnson, Laurens, Macon, tornado
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Body Found in Atlanta Tornado Rubble

Georgia counties affected by the March 14-16th storms. (Courtesy GEMA)
Workers found a body on Saturday while clearing rubble from a building damaged over a week ago when a tornado slammed into downtown Atlanta, police said.
"We may have the first tornado victim in the city of Atlanta, but we won't know for sure until the medical examiner"returns with results, Officer James Polite said.The man had no identification, but he was wearing a wedding band, Polite said.
The front of the damaged building had been a store and the rear had been rented out to a local church. Workers using a Bobcat to scoop up bricks and debris saw a hand sticking out of the rubble and called police, Polite said.
"We believe the man was seeking shelter from the storm and did not make it into the building," Polite said. "He was facing the wall when we found him."Investigators brought in two cadaver dogs to search the rubble, which was east of downtown, but no other bodies were found.
The twister struck the city with little warning March 14, cutting a 6-mile path of destruction through the city with winds gusting up to 130 miles per hour. At least 27 people were injured.
Another tornado that hit northwest Georgia on March 15 killed two Polk County residents.
Click here for more GPB News coverage of the tornado.
Posted by
Dave
at
3/23/2008 04:42:00 PM
Labels: Atlanta tornado, CNN, downtown Atlanta, Omni, twister
Monday, March 17, 2008
Downtown clean-up after tornado
Voices and scenes of the results of the destructive twister that pummeled downtown Atlanta, on the night of Friday, March 14th, 2008, and the cleanup operation on Sunday morning.
Posted by
Dave
at
3/17/2008 06:30:00 PM
Labels: Atlanta, Centennial Olympic Park, tornado, tornado damage
Tornado cleanup causes massive Atlanta traffic problems
Traffic on at least two of the major interstates heading into downtown Atlanta was backing-up for several miles late this morning. Numerous street closures and dozens of traffic light outages across the city are causing drivers to look for alternate routes, or be stuck in long backups.
The city is in cleanup and repair mode following a destructive tornado that cut through Friday night. The twister was the first in recorded history to slice through Atlanta’s downtown. It struck a tourism district around the Centennial Olympic Park, and hit nearby neighborhoods in its 6-mile path.
Damage includes blown-out windows on high-rises, buildings with walls torn away, and a loft-residence complex with a completely collapsed roof. The city’s main convention center took significant damage.
Officials say early damage estimates in the city total at least 150-million dollars.
Click here for more GPB News coverage of the tornado and the aftermath.
Posted by
Edgar Treiguts
at
3/17/2008 12:07:00 PM
Labels: Atlanta tornado, Centennial Olympic Park, tornado, tornado damage
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Atlanta: The clean-up and the accounting

Two cars are partially buried under the rubble of a twister-hit building. Centennial Olympic Park area, March 16, 2008. (Dave Bender)
Georgia officials say cleaning up the debris from the streets of downtown Atlanta won't take as long as repairing the financial damage caused by the tornado that ripped through the city's core.
Scrap metal dealer Jessie Callaway cautiously picks his way through the rubble of a brick building ripped apart by the tornado, March 16, 2008. Centennial Park area. (Dave Bender)
Scrap metal dealer, Jessie Callaway was born and grew up in the neighborhood. He's rummaging through a pile of metal shards in an old building. The twister ripped off two of the corner building's brick walls:
“Yeah, I clean up more ways than one. I'm fixin' to clean that up right now (laughs). It was devastating out here -- I just couldn't believe it -- I ain't never seen nothin' like this before in the state of Georgia.”Several landmarks, including the Georgia World Congress Center, were in the path of the storm, which danced along the Atlanta skyline for about 20 minutes on Friday night. The city's main convention center and two major hotels find themselves hobbled as the convention season begins.

CNN Center and the Omni Hotel. TV trucks and cranes were a common sight in downtown Atlanta on Sunday morning. Centennial Olympic Park area, March 16, 2008. (Dave Bender).
With the closing this weekend of the complex which includes the huge convention center, the Georgia Dome and Centennial Olympic Park, the facility lost the Atlanta Home Show, a dental convention and much of the Southeastern Conference basketball tournament.

Workmen at the Georgia World Congress Center sweep up shards of glass, as glazier crews behind them replace windows shattered in the storm. March 16, 2008. (Dave Bender)
Dan Graveline, executive director of the Georgia World Congress Center, said today on a walking tour with reporters and that it's still too early to add up the damage. Graveline says he hopes repairs will begin soon, starting with the areas that can be fixed most quickly. Graveline says the damage that can't be seen at a glance is also a concern.
Atlanta resident Terry Lewis, who came downtown to survey the mechanized clean-up wearing a hard-hat, compared it to the havoc in her East Atlanta Village neighborhood, where a number of families suffered significant damage to their homes and vehicles:
“This is stunning ... [but] it was actually kind of more heart-wrenching to see what was happening with my neighborhood and my neighbors; the amount of home damage and car damage... yeah – there's not a lot of people here, so you're not seeing the human toll you're seeing in the neighborhood.”Governor Sonny Perdue, who also was at the news conference, expressed relief and gratitude for the minimal loss of life and quick response of emergency workers.

A sign company crew re-welds a fallen billboard behind a car, its roof collapsed from falling debris. Centennial Olympic Park area, March 16, 2008. (Dave Bender)
Hotel officials say they are most concerned about getting the Georgia World Congress Center back into shape as a conference venue. They say their own facilities had minor damage in comparison.

The Westin Hotel is framed by a sign company's stinger truck cranes. Many of the hotel's windows were blown out by the winds. Centennial Olympic Park area, March 16, 2008. (Dave Bender)
Daniel Shmittou, whose renovation firm was called in to save a tornado-damaged structure on Saturday, has one word for the results:
“Devastating. I've been here since '79, and I've never seen anything like it. It's truly a sad day.”Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine, who toured the area Saturday estimates the damages at upwards of 200 million dollars.
Click here for more GPB coverage of the storm and its aftermath.
(With The Associated Press)
Posted by
Dave
at
3/16/2008 07:27:00 PM
Labels: Atlanta, Centennial Olympic Park, Georgia Dome, Georgia World Congress Center, tornado
Saturday, March 15, 2008
Oxendine: Over $150 million in Atlanta storm damage
Click here for the latest National Weather Service update. 
People get out and survey the damage in Atlanta's Cabbage Town neighborhood. At least 27 people were hurt Friday night, though no injuries were believed to be life-threatening. (AP Photo/John Amis)
State Insurance Commissioner John Oxendine estimated damage from Friday night's storm at $150 million to $200 million.
Tens of thousands of basketball fans at two Atlanta arenas were perfectly safe, officials insisted Saturday, even though the crowds apparently weren't warned about an approaching tornado — one that would ravage skyscrapers and injure dozens.
About 18,000 people were watching the Southeastern Conference men's tournament Friday night at the Georgia Dome when its fabric roof began rippling, the catwalks above the court started swaying and chunks of insulation rained onto the players.
The National Weather Service issued a tornado warning about eight minutes before the twister hit, but it wasn't clear when or if that alert was passed on to fans, said Katy Pando, a dome spokeswoman. Fans claimed they never heard or saw one.
Another 16,000 fans watching an NBA game at Philips Arena, in the same complex as the dome, weren't told of the weather, either. The arena apparently sustained little damage, Atlanta Hawks spokesman Arthur Triche said.
Governor Sonny Perdue and Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin declared a state of emergency in several areas in Atlanta.
A sign rests atop four cars in a downtown Atlanta parking lot after a tornado touched down Friday evening, pictured Saturday March 15, 2008. (AP / Ron Williams)
The tornado, with wind up to 130 mph, cut a 6-mile path through downtown Atlanta, smashing hundreds of windows in and around the CNN Center, blowing furniture and luggage out of hotel rooms and crumbling part of an apartment building.
A cab sits in the debris in front of CNN Center in downtown Atlanta Friday, March 14, 2008.
(AP Photo/Dave Martin)
At least two people died in Polk and Floyd counties from the storms. A third is reported in critical condition.
Click here for more GPB News coverage of the storm damage in downtown Atlanta Friday evening.
Click here for tornado and severe weather alerts from the National Weather Service for the Atlanta area and statewide.
(The Associated Press)
Posted by
Dave
at
3/15/2008 10:06:00 PM
Labels: Atlanta, CNN, Floyd County, Insurance commissioner John Oxendine, Onmi, Polk County, tornado
Storm rips through downtown Atlanta causing major damage
A storm in Atlanta last night injured at least 20 people in its path. It came down hard on the area around Centennial Olympic park. Forty-foot billboards and trees toppled, cutting power lines and destroying cars. Glass and debris littered the streets throughout downtown. It interrupted an SEC championship game at the Georgia Dome. Outside Anne Stith of Lexington, Kentucky was selling t-shirts.
"I was trying to get the t-shirts off of the counter into the trailer and I felt the trailer lift up," she said. " You could see it clearly. It was a twister."
The path of destruction continued through neighborhoods. It moved into Cabbage Town. Debra Spitzer was visiting her brother there when a huge oak tree crashed through the roof.
"And all he could holler was, 'Sis, where are you," she said. "Bricks and stuff was just falling on me and I just said God help me, please God."
Spitzer's brother was taken to the hospital for minor injuries. The city has canceled a St. Patricks Day parade. The remaining SEC championship games have been moved to Georgia Tech because of damage to the Georgia Dome. There was no tornado warning and Mayor Franklin promised a thorough investigation. Thousands of people are still without power.
Posted by
Susanna Capelouto
at
3/15/2008 05:43:00 AM
Labels: Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin
Friday, February 29, 2008
Americus: One year since deadly twister

Wrecking crews demolish ruins of Sumter Regional Hospital, severely damaged by the storm, February, 2008. (Dave Bender)
Governor Sonny Perdue and state officials will attend memorial services in Americus today, commemorating the one-year anniversary of a tornado that devastated the town.
The F-3 twister took two lives, and left a two-mile swath of destruction through the town on the night of March first, 2007.

Then and now: Doctor's Pharmacy, Americus, in Feb., 2008, and on the morning after the storm, March 2, 2007. (Dave Bender)
Perdue will join local officials and residents in mourning their loss, but, looking to a brighter future:
An anonymous donor has given a $1 million dollar donation to reconstruction efforts at the town's Sumter Regional Hospital, destroyed by the storm.
The SRH Foundation has received close to $4 million dollars in donations and equipment, according to local reports.
COGIM units set up in the hospital's parking lot, will serve patients in the interim until a permanent facility is built. (February, 2008/Dave Bender)
A temporary, 76-bed acute-care center will serve the community until a permanent hospital is built. It is slated to open in 2010. More information is available on the Internet at http://www.sumterregional.org.
Click here for more GPB News coverage of the tornado and the reconstruction.
Posted by
Dave
at
2/29/2008 09:52:00 AM
Labels: Americus, Sumter Regional Hospital, tornado, twister
Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Americus, hospital plan to rebuild from the ruins

Sumter Regional Hospital, Americus, Ga., Feb. 4, 2008. (Dave Bender)
On March first of last year, a tornado ripped through Americus, killing two and devastating the community. What did the city learn and what are their plans if such a disaster strikes again?
The force-3 twister ripped apart lives, homes, businesses and vehicles in a two-mile wide-swath of destruction. Although much of the external damage has been fixed, city and county officials are still dealing with deeper issues of planning and preparation.
Mary Ann Crowley directs the Americus chapter of Habitat for Humanity:
“These kinds of events and catastrophes in the lives of communities are not 30-minute sitcoms. They don't start and end when you want them to. You can't do the instant replay and skip the parts that you don't like.”Crowley says that long time residents of Habitat homes damaged in the tornado faced a welter of legal and insurance issues over ownership, that only a year later have been cleared up.
Little of the physical damage is left, according to Americus Mayor Barry Blount:
"Within 69 days the community was, essentially, cleaned up. The rebuilding, reconstruction has gone on - if you ride through town, you can see new buildings have been put up in place of the buildings that have been destroyed. We do still have some structures that are still, haven't been rebuilt; there are still some issues with insurance companies...”But the biggest issue in town is the local hospital. Sumter County Regional was destroyed by the tornado.
A new interim facility will open in March, exactly one year after the disaster. A completely new hospital is planned to open by 2010.
The hospital is holding a fundraiser – one of several. They're selling off the bricks of the original 1953 structure, after the bulldozers bring them down.
But other shocks to Sumter County's system are still not resolved.
Blount says there's still no county-wide emergency warning system. The city has turned to the Federal and Georgia Emergency Management Authorities for help:
“We've applied for some grants from FEMA and GEMA; thus far, we have not received any for an emergency warning system.”Blount is hopeful he'll get such a system in the coming year. But one thing has changed for the better since the tornado - communication between the Police, Sheriffs Department, city and county rescue services:
“We have rectified that, so that now all the different emergency personnel can communicate with one another.”Turning to the home front, Blount says he's told residents that first and foremost they have to get their own houses in order. That means a supply of non-perishable food, water, an evacuation plan and an emergency radio with fresh batteries.
Blount's comments echo the “YOYO-72” idea, stressing individual preparation: You're On You're On for the first 72-hours.
On February 29th, Americus is planning a commemoration of that tornado-stricken night.
Click here for more GPB News coverage of the tornado, and efforts to rebuild Americus and lives affected by the storms.
Posted by
Dave
at
2/05/2008 07:28:00 AM
Labels: Americus, severe weather, Sumter Regional Hospital, tornado, twister
Sunday, February 3, 2008
Twister-hit hospital selling bricks for new building
Destroyed vehicle in SRH parking lot. Hospital is in the background, March 2, 2007. (Dave Bender)
The hospital destroyed in a tornado that ripped through Americus nearly a year ago is for sale - one brick at a time.
Sumter Regional Hospital is selling bricks from the building ripped apart by the March 1st, 2007, storm to help pay for a new hospital. For months, doctors treated more than 5,400 patients in eight counties in tents set up near the hospital.
Since then, the facility has operated in a temporary structure.
Basic medical triage services were held in several tents like these, set up in the hospital's parking lot. March 2, 2007. (Dave Bender)
The bricks go for $25, $50 and $100 each. For more information, contact the hospital's marketing department at (229) 928-4000.
(Dave Bender)
The tornadoes killed nine people in Sumter, Taylor and Baker counties, and caused more than 210 million dollars in damage, demolishing dozens of Georgia homes and businesses.
Click here for more GPB News coverage of the twister and its aftermath.
(The Associated Press)
Posted by
Dave
at
2/03/2008 10:50:00 PM
Labels: Americus, Baker County, Sumter County, Sumter Regional Hospital, Taylor County, tornado, twister