Soldier4Christ
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« on: February 02, 2007, 02:43:39 PM » |
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At least 14 killed as storms rip central Florida Church demolished, homes destroyed, thousands left without power
Storms carrying what was believed to be the state’s deadliest tornado in a decade cut a path across four central Florida counties early Friday, killing at least 14 people, damaging hundreds of homes, leaving hundreds homeless and littering fields with clothes, furniture and splintered lumber.
Searchers moved through the four-county region, using spray paint to mark what they found in husks of buildings while residents who had startled out of bed came back to look for friends or loved ones and salvage anything that wasn’t blown apart.
At least one tornado touched down overnight, and central Florida residents were on alert for new twisters throughout the morning.
Lake County spokesman Christopher Patton confirmed the 14 deaths, 11 in Paisley and three in Lady Lake, where the mayor said nearly every home was destroyed.
Pastor Howard Roszak of the First Baptist Church in Paisley said two teenage boys who belonged to his church were killed. One of the boys died along with his father, while both parents of the other teen were killed.
“I know all these kids real good. I love these kids. I hear there is nothing left ... just absolutely nothing,” Roszak said, referring to the home of one of the boys.
The storm went through so many mobile homes that it "looks like a war zone; it's been totally devastated,” said Ed Nathanson, Lady Lake's police chief.
An official at the county's emergency operations center said more than 500 buildings were damaged or destroyed across the county. Some people were still reported to be missing.
Up to 100 homes were damaged in Sumter County, but there were no reports of deaths.
Gov. Charlie Crist declared a state of emergency for Volusia, Sumter, Lake and Seminole counties.
“Our priority today is search and rescue,” Crist told reporters in Tallahassee.
Overnight strike was worst scenario Dozens of mobile homes near Lady Lake were destroyed. Chairs, beds and clothes were strewn about yards, with debris hanging from trees. Some homes were tossed from their foundations, while others had their roofs ripped off.
The storms moved across Sumter and Lake counties around 3:15 a.m., then moved to Volusia County, where more than 100 homes were damaged in New Smyrna Beach and 10 people were transported to hospitals with injuries. A county medical clinic in DeLand was severely damaged.
“The most dangerous tornado scenario is a threat for killer tornadoes at night, and that was the case,” said Dave Sharp, a National Weather Service meteorologist.
"I can say with high confidence that it's tornado damage. It's not straight-line wind damage," Sharp said.
Forecasters started issuing tornado warnings for central Florida around midnight, but by midday, the tornado threat had diminished significantly, Sharp said.
"We heard a big boom then we heard the freight-train noise. All five of us got in the closet," said Linda Craig, 44, who lives in Hontoon Island, a heavily damaged area of Volusia County.
Many homes were turned into rubble along Lake Mack. Vern Huber, 87, said his weather radio, a special unit triggered by government warnings, went off around 3:30 a.m. and he and his wife, Louedna, 81, huddled in the hall and put pillows from the couch on top of themselves.
"It was a deafening roar," Huber said.
Church demolished The Lady Lake Church of God was demolished, its pews, altar and Bibles left in a jumbled mess. The 31-year-old, steel-reinforced structure was built to withstand 150-mph winds, the Rev. Larry Lynn said.
By daybreak, parishioners gathered amid the ruins, hugging each other and consoling Lynn. They planned to clear the debris and hold Sunday services on the empty lot.
“That’s just the building. The people are the church. We’ll be back bigger and stronger,” Lynn said.
In The Villages, one of the nation’s largest retirement communities, Lee Shaver said he shielded his wife Irene with his body while huddling in a closet as the roof peeled off their home. Fence posts launched as projectiles were embedded into the wall of their home, Irene Shaver said.
“Every muscle and bone in my body shook,” said Lee Shaver, 54. “We don’t know what to do. We have no cell phones, wallets, IDs.”
Wide swath without power At least five crashes took place within a quarter mile of each other near Interstate 4’s New Smyrna Beach exit, closing the highway for about three hours.
In one case, a semitrailer was lifted up and landed on another semi, pinning the driver in his cab, said Kim Miller, a spokeswoman with the Florida Highway Patrol. The driver did not suffer life-threatening injuries, she said.
About 10,000 customers were without power across a wide swath of central Florida, Progress Energy spokeswoman Cherie Jacobs said.
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