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Tornado-producing storm deals deadly flooding and large hail to Oklahoma and Texas

Tornado-producing storm deals deadly flooding and large hail to Oklahoma and Texas

Chicago Tribune20-04-2025

A slow-moving, active storm system brought heavy rain, large hail and tornadoes to parts of Texas and Oklahoma and left two people dead as severe weather warnings Sunday continue to threaten parts of the south-central and Midwest U.S.
On Easter Sunday, communities in Texas and Oklahoma were beginning to assess the damage wreaked by tornadoes. There were 17 reported events Saturday, according to Bob Oravec, lead forecaster with the National Weather Service's Weather Prediction Center. Five were confirmed in south-central Oklahoma, including one that inflicted substantial damage on a small town that was still recovering from a March tornado.
The storm also brought heavy rain to a broad swath of north-central Texas across central-eastern Oklahoma, much of which saw 2 to 4 inches (5 to 10 centimeters) accumulate Saturday into Sunday.
Police in Moore, about 10 miles (16 kilometers) south of Oklahoma City, received dozens of reports of 'high-water incidents' over the weekend, including two cars stranded in flood waters Saturday evening. One car was swept away under a bridge, and police said they were able to rescue some people, but a woman and 12-year-old boy were found dead.
'This was a historical weather event that impacted roads and resulted in dozens of high-water incidents across the city,' Moore police said in a statement Sunday. Moore has about 63,000 residents.
Oravec said the system wasn't moving much over Texas and Oklahoma Saturday, leaving the area stuck under a very active thunderstorm pattern that produced large hail, flash flooding and tornadoes.
Bill Macon, emergency management director in Oklahoma's Marshall County, said their early assessments show a tornado 'skipped and jumped around' over a path of 6 to 7 miles (about 10 to 11 kilometers) in the rural area that left at least 20 homes damaged, with some destroyed completely.
Macon said people were mostly home when the late night tornado came through, downing 'huge' trees and dozens of electric poles and power lines, but there had not been reports of injuries or fatalities.
'We take those things pretty serious down here in Oklahoma,' Macon said of the National Weather Service's warnings.
One Oklahoma town that was still rebuilding from an early March tornado was hit again late Saturday. The north side of Ada, a town home to about 16,000 people, sustained damage that the weather service said indicated at least an EF1 tornado — with wind speeds between 86 and 110 mph (138 to 177 kph) — based on a preliminary survey. Social media posts showed roofs ripped off businesses in town, storefront windows blown in and billboards knocked sideways.
In a video posted to Facebook, Jason Keck, Ada director of emergency management, said the tornado seemed to track across the north side of town to a shopping center, 'leaving a lot of damage to buildings, power lines and trees.'
One clothing store was 'severely damaged,' according to The Ada News, but 'bracketed on both sides by intact structures.'
At least two tornadoes crossed west Parker County, Texas, on Saturday, the county's emergency services said on Facebook. Emergency crews were dispatched to several houses with roofs torn off and homes exposed, photos showed. One detached roof ended up smashed across a driveway.
The whole storm system is moving northeast into Arkansas, Missouri, southern Illinois and southeastern Iowa, Oravec said. While it's moving faster, he said, the active system still carries the threat of large hail, high winds and tornadoes to the region.
While heavy rain was subsiding in Texas and Oklahoma by late Sunday afternoon, additional heavy rain is expected across parts of the Plains this week, Oravec said. With streams already swollen and the ground saturated, that leaves the area at risk of additional flooding.
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