logo
Storms kill 1, injure another and displace hundreds of inmates in Nebraska

Storms kill 1, injure another and displace hundreds of inmates in Nebraska

Yahoo3 days ago
Strong storms before dawn Saturday in eastern Nebraska killed one person and seriously injured another in a state park and displaced hundreds of inmates after two prison housing units were damaged, officials said, even as other Midwest states also braced for bad weather.
The Waterloo Volunteer Fire Department was called to Two Rivers state park just before 7 a.m. Saturday, where first responders found a vehicle crushed by a large cottonwood tree. The tree had toppled as the storm brought gusts higher than 80 mph to the area, according to the National Weather Service. A woman in the vehicle was declared dead at the scene, while a man was trapped inside, the fire department said in a news release.
It took firefighters about 90 minutes to free the man because of the size and weight of the tree, the department said. Once free, the man was taken to an Omaha hospital with life-threatening injuries, Waterloo Fire Chief Travis Harlow said.
The state park — a popular camping spot — is about 5 miles (8 kilometers) west of Omaha's western border.
High winds caused widespread damage across eastern Nebraska, toppling trees, damaging roofs and pulling down electrical lines. About 20 miles north of Omaha in Blair, the roof of a warehouse was torn open by high winds. Thousands of people were left without power in the immediate aftermath.
In the state capital of Lincoln, the storms damaged two housing units at the Nebraska State Penitentiary, displacing 387 prisoners, the state Department of Correctional Services said in a statement.
'There are no reported injuries, and all staff and incarcerated individuals are safe and accounted for,' the agency said.
Strong storms also moved through parts of eastern Wisconsin on Saturday, bringing gusts of 60 mph to the state's Door Peninsula, the National Weather Service said.
The weather service said more strong storms were possible across the nation's midsection Saturday night into Sunday, stretching from western Colorado into Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, northern Missouri and into Illinois and Wisconsin.
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Residents in Alaska's capital urged to evacuate over flooding threat from melting glacier
Residents in Alaska's capital urged to evacuate over flooding threat from melting glacier

Yahoo

time2 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Residents in Alaska's capital urged to evacuate over flooding threat from melting glacier

Hundreds of residents in Alaska's capital of Juneau have been urged to evacuate over an imminent glacial flood threat. On Tuesday, Juneau officials said on Facebook that there was a glacial outburst at Suicide Basin, a side basin of the Mendenhall Glacier above Juneau, according to the National Weather Service. As the Mendenhall Glacier recedes in a warming climate, the basin has released glacier lake outburst floods that have caused an overflow of water along Mendenhall Lake and River every year since 2011. 'The basin is releasing and flooding is expected along Mendenhall Lake and River late Tuesday through Wednesday,' Juneau officials wrote in Tuesday's post. 'Residents are advised to evacuate the potential flood inundation area.' The Anchorage Daily News reported that more than 1,000 residents and businesses were placed under the evacuation alert. The National Weather Service has issued a flood warning until Thursday at 8 a.m. local time. The Mendenhall River is currently at 9.85 feet, and the major flood stage for the river is 14 feet. The service warned the river will crest at 16.6 feet at around 4 p.m. Wednesday. This forecasted flooding could break a record, which was set when the Mendenhall River crested at 15.99 feet in August 2024. Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy has issued a disaster declaration in response to the imminent glacial flood threat. 'By issuing this declaration before the flood occurs, we can position state resources and personnel in advance to support local and tribal governments in their efforts to protect lives, homes, and essential services,' Dunleavy said in a statement. 'Our goal is to act early to reduce impacts and preserve community safety.' The imminent record-breaking flood this summer follows two years of severe flooding, according to a press release from Alaska's Department of Military and Veterans Affairs, which announced Dunleavy's declaration. After last year's devastating flooding, which damaged homes and public infrastructure, two miles of flood control barriers along the Mendenhall River were installed. 'I really do feel like we are prepared this year,' Juneau Manager Katie Koester told The Washington Post. 'I'm really hoping that we'll have a success story by Thursday.'

Utah narrowly missed its driest July on record. Can this week break its dry stretch?
Utah narrowly missed its driest July on record. Can this week break its dry stretch?

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Utah narrowly missed its driest July on record. Can this week break its dry stretch?

July is typically one of Utah's driest months, but last month narrowly missed a 125-year-old record that explains how drought conditions have worsened as quickly as they have statewide. Utah collected an average of 0.25 inches of precipitation last month, well short of the nearly inch of rain it averaged during the 20th century, according to data released by the National Centers for Environmental Information. It also ended up the second-driest July since statewide data was first collected in 1895 — just 0.05 inches above the record-low collected in July 1900. Last month was also 2.7 degrees above the average, but not as hot as the last few years. Its average of 74.2 degrees Fahrenheit tied for 17th warmest July on record, while the previous three years remain among the 10 hottest on record. Utah's meteorological summer — the combination of June, July and August — could ultimately break a record that was also set in 1900. Paired with June, which was the state's 34th driest on record, this summer is on track for its fifth-driest on record. The state needs to collect more than a third of an inch overall statewide by the end of August to avoid the 125-year-old record low of 0.88 inches statewide. The numbers reflect a predominant pattern that has kept Utah warm, dry and windy so far this summer. The traditional pattern that often brings oceanic moisture to Utah — typically from mid-July through August — has mostly set up farther south and east than it normally does, meaning that more storms have ended up in areas south and east of Utah, Sam Webber, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service, told last week. A series of low-pressure patterns also set up over the Pacific Northwest, but none of those ended up in Utah. As such, many Utah cities have experienced long periods without rain. Salt Lake City hasn't received measurable rain since July 4. Even southern Utah communities more likely to receive monsoonal rains in the summer — like Monticello and Cedar City — have not received measurable rain in over three weeks. All of this has shown up on the drought map. About 70% of Utah was in drought at the end of May, including 46% in severe or extreme drought. The whole state is now in drought, including 66% in severe or extreme drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Utah's reservoir system also dropped from 86% capacity in June to 70% by the start of this week, per state data. Monsoonal return? Monsoonal rain is back in Utah's forecast this week, which could break up some of the state's dry streaks, but it's unclear yet how beneficial the storms will be. A high-pressure system coming into Utah via the Pacific Coast will first create more hot and dry conditions for the first half of this week. It will then help bring in monsoonal moisture as it continues moving east, crossing the Four Corners during the second half of the week, said KSL meteorologist Devan Masciulli. The way the system is forecast to move is expected to create a more traditional monsoonal setup, possibly creating isolated showers and thunderstorms on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Many parts of the state have a 20% to 30% chance of precipitation on Thursday and Friday, as it's difficult to project where monsoonal showers will set up or how much a storm will deliver. The only problem is that weather forecast models aren't overly optimistic about Utah's precipitation totals. Northeast Utah and parts of south-central Utah could end up with the highest totals by the end of the week, projected to be closer to 0.5 inches, according to the National Weather Service. That could bring decent moisture over the Monroe Canyon and Beulah fires burning in those two regions. But with less moisture in the models, Masciulli points out that storms could lead to more microbursts and dry thunderstorms — two elements that can spark new fires and spread existing ones. It's something that meteorologists and firefighters will both track this week. Full seven-day forecasts for areas across Utah can be found online, at the KSL Weather Center. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store