
Storm outbreak May 18, 2025
A funnel cloud forms in Arapahoe County
Elbert County, CO
CBS
Windows blown out by storms in Elbert County
Arapahoe County, CO
Arapahoe County Sheriff's Office
A large funnel cloud moves through Arapahoe County
Aurora, CO
Jessica Walter
Hail accumulation at a home in Aurora
Bennett, CO
Cory Samaniego-Lee
A funnel cloud forming close by
Bennett, CO
CBS
Storms caused serious damage to a solar farm west of Bennett
Rocky Mountain Arsenal, CO
James McVay
A buffalo grazes unbothered in the foreground as a funnel cloud forms in the background
Bennett, CO
CBS
Tree snapped by storms
Between Watkins and Bennett
Pete Tapia
Funnel cloud spotted from CR 30 between Watkins, Bennett and Strasburg
Between Watkins and Bennett
Pete Tapia
Funnel cloud spotted from CR 30 between Watkins, Bennett and Strasburg
Bennett, CO
CBS
Storm debris damages fence in Bennett
Commerce City
Caitlin Campbell
Funnel cloud spotted from 56th Avenue east of 270
Location unknown
Robert Dagit
Large funnel seen forming behind a neighborhood
Bennett, CO
CBS
Storms in Bennett overturned a trailer and camper near Bennett
Location unknown
Robert Dagit
Small funnel cloud seen forming in the distance
Aurora, CO
Tim Nelson
Funnel cloud seen from Inspiration in southeast Aurora
Elbert County, CO
CBS
Roof partially ripped off of a home during the storms
Aurora, CO
Troy Huffman
A funnel cloud forms near a road in Aurora
Strasburg, CO
Tammie Manbeck
Funnel cloud forms west of Strasburg Road and 30
Bennett, CO
CBS
Storms ripped off part of the roof of home west of Bennett
Arapahoe County
Troy Handy
Funnel cloud seen forming from near Arapahoe County Landfill
Between Watkins and Bennett
Pete Tapia
Large funnel cloud seen along CR 30 between Watkins, Bennett and Strasburg
Elbert County, CO
CBS
Windows of a home blown out by storms
Aurora, CO
Jessica Walter
Funnel cloud forming in Aurora
Elbert County, CO
CBS
Siding from damaged home strewn across the ground
Bennet, CO
Garrett Scallon
Funnel cloud in Bennet
Bennet, CO
Garrett Scallon
Funnel cloud moving near Bennett
Bennett, CO
CBS
Storm smashes windows of a home in Bennett
Bennett, CO
Garrett Scallon
Large funnel cloud forms near Bennett
Bennett, CO
CBS
Debris rests in yard of a Bennett home
Between Watkins and Bennett
Pete Tapia
Large funnel cloud seen along CR 30 between Watkins, Bennett and Strasburg
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CBS News
an hour ago
- CBS News
Dozens of beaches in Massachusetts closed for swimming due to bacteria, toxic algae in water
It will be ideal beach day weather in Massachusetts this weekend, with sunny skies and temperatures in the 80s and 90s. But dozens of beaches across the state are closed for swimming because there is either too much bacteria in the water or toxic algae is present. The Massachusetts Department of Public Health maintains a daily online dashboard of beach closures. As of 8 a.m. Friday, there were more than 50 closures listed. The main beach at Walden Pond in Concord is closed all summer due to construction of a new bathhouse. Damon Pond Beach, Ashby (Bacterial Exceedance)Ashland Reservoir - Main Beach, Ashland (Bacterial Exceedance)Woodbury, Beverly (Bacterial Exceedance)Nutting Lake - Micozzi Beach @ North, Billerica (Bacterial Exceedance)Nutting Lake - Micozzi Beach @ South, Billerica (Bacterial Exceedance) Carson Beach @ Bathhouse, Boston (Bacterial Exceedance)Carson Beach @ L Street, Boston (Bacterial Exceedance) Freeman Lake, Chelmsford (Bacterial Exceedance and Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom)Chicopee Beach, Chicopee (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom)Walden Pond - Main, Concord (Other)Sandy Beach, Danvers (Bacterial Exceedance)Moses Smith Creek, Dartmouth (Bacterial Exceedance)Centennial Grove, Essex (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom)Learned Pond Beach, Framingham (Bacterial Exceedance) Saxonville Beach, Framingham (Bacterial Exceedance) Chilson Beach, Franklin (Bacterial Exceedance) American Legion Park, Georgetown (Bacterial Exceedance) Seymour Pond, Harwich (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom) Eagle Lake, Holden (Bacterial Exceedance)Pleasure Point, Holliston (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom) Stoddard Park, Holliston (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom) Sandy Point - Plum Island @ North, Ipswich (Bacterial Exceedance)Santuit Pond @ Bryants Neck, Mashpee (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom) Santuit Pond @ Town Landing, Mashpee (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom) Nahant Beach, Nahant (Bacterial Exceedance) Sesachacha Pond, Nantucket (Bacterial Exceedance) Cochituate State Park Beach, Natick (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom)Memorial Beach @ Wading (Bacterial Exceedance)Crystal Lake, Newton (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom)Frye Pond Beach, North Andover (Bacterial Exceedance) Stevens Pond - Center, North Andover (Bacterial Exceedance) Carbuncle Pond, Oxford (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom) Lulu Pond Beach, Pittsfield (Bacterial Exceedance) Children's Island, Salem (Bacterial Exceedance) Ocean Avenue, Salem (Bacterial Exceedance) Willow Avenue, Salem (Bacterial Exceedance) Pearce Lake @ Breakheart Reservation, Saugus (Bacterial Exceedance) Community Center Beach, Sharon (Bacterial Exceedance) South Pond Beach, Southwick (Bacterial Exceedance) Bass Pond @ Right, Springfield (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom)Camp Wilder @ Right), Springfield (Bacterial Exceedance) Paddle Club @ Right, Springfield (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom)Beamans Pond, Templeton (Bacterial Exceedance) Pearl Hill Pond Beach, Townsend (Bacterial Exceedance) Shangri-La, Wareham (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom) Lakeside, Webster (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom) Memorial Beach, Webster (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom) Hampton Ponds - Kingsley Beach, Westfield (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom) Hamptons Pond - Lamberts Beach, Westfield (Harmful Cyanobacteria Bloom) Crow Hill Pond Beach, Westminster (Bacterial Exceedance)Wilmington Town Beach, Wilmington (Bacterial Exceedance) Bacterial exceedance can result from runoff pollution or sewage overflows after heavy rain. Swimming in water with too much bacteria can cause gastrointestinal symptoms, respiratory illness and itching. The harmful cyanobacteria blooms can lead to similar problems. The algae bloom occurs when cyanobacteria multiplies quickly, causing water to become pea soup-colored and smell bad. In Plymouth last week, beachgoers and their pets were warned to avoid several ponds because the toxic algae could make them sick. None of the beach closures are related to a rare flesh-eating bacteria that infected a swimmer at Old Silver Beach in Falmouth. Health officials there say the beach is safe for swimming as long as people make sure they do not go in the water with an exposed wound.


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
Chicago Launches Flood-Warning System as Rainstorms Intensify
Nedra Sims Fears still remembers the night years ago when her family home in Chicago flooded, sparking an electrical fire. Her father woke her up and rushed her outside into the pouring rain as smoke filled the rooms of their home in the city's Chatham neighborhood. 'We could see the smoke and smell the smoke, and we literally escaped with the clothes on our back,' Sims Fears said. It was one of four floods that Sims Fears would survive throughout her adolescence. 'It's a lot for a family,' said the lifelong Chicagoan and executive director of the Greater Chatham Initiative, a community organization. 'It is just devastating.'
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Historic flooding in Milwaukee forces combined sewer overflow
The Brief Recent flash flooding in the Milwaukee area forced the Metropolitan Sewerage District (MMSD) to initiate a "combined sewer overflow." This helps prevent sewage from backing up into homes and businesses. However, for this storm, it still wasn't enough. MILWAUKEE - Saturday's storms flooded basements, cars, and streets. It also forced the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District (MMSD) to send a combination of storm water and sewage into Lake Michigan and nearby rivers. The FOX6 Weather Experts are calling this a "1,000-year storm." To be clear, that's not to say it will happen once every 1,000 years. It means the chance of it happening every year is 1-in-1,000. So here, those narrow odds align and a system built to store water couldn't keep up. FREE DOWNLOAD: Get breaking news alerts in the FOX LOCAL Mobile app for iOS or Android What is the Deep Tunnel? What we know Backed-up basements, raging rivers, and cars floating, even underwater, on state highways, the damage from the weekend storm is widespread. The Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District says it could have been even worse without 28 miles of storage buried underground known as the "Deep Tunnel." "Think of the Deep Tunnel as a big bath tub, and it's designed to hold water and wastewater until the treatment plants have the time and capacity to clean the water," said Bill Graffin, MMSD Public Information Manager. MMSD can store more than a billion gallons of water a day thanks to its water treatment facilities, like Jones Island, and the Deep Tunnel, which is well underground. Looking back on Saturday and Sunday, that capacity may sound like a lot. But for this storm, it still wasn't enough. Combined sewage overflow What we know So, just before ten o'clock Saturday night, MMSD began what's known as a "combined sewage overflow." "The biggest thing we try to prevent during a storm is basement back-ups. The only way you can do that is to have a sewer overflow. The overflow is basically a relief valve out in the system," added Graffin. That overflow is from a pipe that combines storm water and whatever's flushed from homes and businesses. Without the space to treat it, it's sent to the closest exit points, into rivers and lakes. For this storm, it's in the Milwaukee River, Menomonee River, and Lake Michigan between McKinley and South Shore Beaches. Bill Graffin Public says while that's not the preferred outcome, the district believes it's the safest. SIGN UP TODAY: Get daily headlines, breaking news emails from FOX6 News "It's a bigger health threat to have it in someone's basement, especially if it's not cleaned up properly," said Graffin. And he says this could be the biggest overflow MMSD has ever reported. Awaiting the numbers What's next The district is still calculating just how many gallons were released, as they don't have sensors in their infrastructure to automatically know. The law requires that they report that data to the Wisconsin DNR within five days. It means all of that data is due tomorrow (Friday). The Source FOX6 has extensively covered the historic flooding in southeast Wisconsin, and talked with an official at the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewage District (MMSD).