North Texas picks up the pieces after tornadoes kill 6
Tornado 'just set down' on neighborhood
But other residents,
those from the hardest-hit neighborhoods, had to wait, hoping to hear
when they could go back to their damaged and leveled homes to see what
remains.
Ronna Cotten said she has
been told she can't re-enter her subdivision to "check to see if we
have any belongings left" for at least two days, maybe as many as seven.
Power is expected to be
down for the next three weeks, Cotten said she was told. Cotten stayed
in the home of a woman who picked her up from the rescue center
Wednesday night and worked the phones Thursday trying to find hotel
rooms for her family.
She still considers herself fortunate.
"I feel very lucky
because we are alive" said the mother of four, who clutched a doorknob
to keep the closet door shut as winds tore through her home.
Rescue crews searched for seven people missing after the tornadoes struck this town in North Texas, killing at least six.
A witness described getting an uncomfortably close view of the storm.
"One second you could see
the whole roof collapse, and you could see the twister just there,
basically," the man told CNN affiliate KTVT. "It was horrible."
He and his family of five had crowded into the bathroom for shelter when the storm hit, he said.
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"We were just watching the hail go by and then it just happened in the blink of an eye," a woman said.
Nearby, a water heater
was on its side; an upside-down car, its windows shattered and its
silver skin crumpled, lay helpless in the dirt. A wheelchair lay in
pieces a few feet away.
Video shot from a helicopter showed rafters still intact, but the roofs they supported were gone.
Hood County Sheriff
Roger Deeds identified those killed as Jose Tovar Alvarez, 34; Marjari
Davis, thought to be 82; Tommy Martin, 61; Leo Stefanski, 83; and Robert
and Glenda Whitehead.
Deeds said search and rescue operations to find survivors "are pretty much winding down."
"We're going to keep on looking," Deeds added. "We're not going to give up until every piece of debris is turned over."
Rescuers had walked
through the hardest-hit subdivision in Granbury "over and over and over
again," Deeds said earlier in the day. "I'm confident we haven't left
anybody behind, but we're still checking."
Granbury is 30 miles southwest of Fort Worth.
The deaths occurred in a
neighborhood of about 110 homes, many of which were built by Habitat
for Humanity. Most of the homes in the Rancho Brazos subdivision were
destroyed or damaged, the sheriff said. That is where the missing live,
too, he said.
Mayor Pro Tem Nin Hulett
told CNN's Anderson Cooper that there were indications those people may
be on vacation or in other areas, but officials were working to confirm
that.
People whose lives had
been hit by the twisters were asking to get back to their homes, but the
sheriff said he wasn't convinced it was safe for civilians to be in the
area yet.
Three people were taken to an area hospital, and 13 others were taken to hospitals in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, he said.
Some of the patients had
to have amputations, Dr. Kerri Sistrunk, head of the trauma unit at
Lake Granbury Medical Center. Others suffered head injuries and open
fractures, as well as minor abrasions, she said.
At least 13 tornadoes
touched down in the area, the National Weather Service said. A survey
team said it found damage indicating an EF4 tornado had struck. That is
the second-most severe classification on a scale of zero to five,
Several of the tornadoes struck Cleburne, about 30 miles east of Granbury.
"I was actually standing outside on my front porch and watched (a) tornado come across," Robert Barnett told CNN affiliate WFAA. "I've seen tornadoes before -- I've chased them -- but I've never seen one like this. It freaked me out."
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Another resident said he thought the storm had passed but was wrong.
"I went back outside and
saw stuff flying by and said 'It's here! Let's go!'" Darrin Vasquez
told the station. He lost part of the roof on his home and when rain
flooded in, a ceiling collapsed.
WFAA said at least 12 homes lost their entire roofs.
In nearby Ellis County, a
suspected tornado knocked out power in the city of Ennis about
midnight, said Steve Howerton, city manager.
"Several buildings in the downtown historic district have been seriously damaged," he said.
"There are a lot of
traumatic injuries," said Donna Martin, a worker at a local veterans'
organization. "My husband told me that a car was lifted in the air. It
just came in and hit so fast."
B.B. French, who lives on a canal three miles from where the worst of the damage occurred, said she was lucky.
"We had extreme winds,"
the 71-year-old resident said in a telephone interview. "And then the
sirens went off and then I got inside."
As lightning flashed and
rain poured, she watched from inside her home as two mallards lay on
the pavement. "They just laid down on the sidewalk until the hail came,
and then they were smart enough to waddle over and get underneath the
roof" of her boat deck.
After the storm passed,
French went outside to find that her neighbor on one side had lost a few
shingles from his roof; on the other side, a neighbor had lost a couple
of shutters; but her house was unscathed.
"It really is just luck," she said.
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