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WEATHER REPORT
Tornado season heading for record book

One dead as typhoon skirts Philippines
Manila (AFP) May 27, 2011 - One person died in the Philippines as typhoon Songda brought floods and triggered landslides that cut off roads across the country, rescuers said Friday.

The eye of the storm passed to the north of the Philippines early Friday, sparing the country a direct hit, the government's National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said in a statement.

A 70-year-old man drowned on the eastern island of Catanduanes while more than 40 houses were damaged in the southern island of Mindanao, it added.

More than 262,000 people who had sought refuge at government-run shelters near Catanduanes were returning to their homes after the typhoon brushed past the region on Thursday, it said.

The state weather service said the sparsely populated Batanes island group, near the country's northern sea border with Taiwan, remained at risk from the typhoon's peak winds of 195 kilometres an hour.

An average of 20 storms and typhoons, some of them deadly, hit the Philippines every year. Tropical storm Aere left 31 people dead after cutting across Luzon island earlier in May.

by Staff Writers
State College, Pa. (UPI) May 26, 2011
With nearly 1,200 tornadoes reported so far, the 2011 season is destined for the U.S. tornado record book, meteorologists say.

Four have been deadly EF-5 twisters, the highest rated strength for a tornado, resulting in a death toll has surpassed 500, significantly higher than the average annual fatalities of about 60, Accuweather.com reported Thursday.

Science does not have the tools to stop a tornado from touching down but investment in enhanced warning infrastructure and more awareness of severe weather events can reduce their impact, Accuweather said.

Doppler radar technology and the specialized skills of severe weather meteorologists can track tornadoes at street level and provide timely warnings in an attempt to reduce loss of life and property, forecasters said.

But there is still room for improvement, they said.

During the Joplin, Mo., tornado Sunday, emergency sirens sounded 20 minutes before the twister landed but many people were still caught off guard. This might be in part due to the high number of precautionary alarms, forecasters said.

While warnings are a boon to the public at large, false warnings are not only inconvenient but can affect specific operations, they said.

"To a hospital, a false alarm takes the focus off patient care and forces medically difficult sheltering," said Accuweather's Mike Smith.

However, accurate forecasts can help government agencies know when their shelter areas or locations essential to the continuation of public services are threatened. As a result, local relief and public safety services can avoid interruptions at a time when they will be desperately needed, Accuweather said.

earlier related report
Missouri town says 232 missing after tornado
Joplin, Missouri (AFP) May 26, 2011 - Officials Thursday said 232 people were still missing four days after a tornado tore through a Missouri town, and had only managed to identify one of the 125 bodies found in the storm's wake.

Some of the missing from Sunday's disaster in Joplin may be among the unidentified remains being stored in a hastily constructed mass morgue.

But officials pleaded with anxious family members for patience while they undertake a lengthy identification process involving DNA testing and fingerprinting.

"The 232, we can't presume that all of those are deceased," Andrea Spiller, Missouri's deputy director of public safety, told reporters.

Some may simply have failed to contact anxious friends and family. There may also still be people trapped in the rubble who have not been officially reported missing, Spiller cautioned.

Asked why families were not being allowed into the morgue to visually identify their loved ones, she replied: "It is not 100 percent accurate, and 100 percent accurate is our goal."

Joplin resident Tammy Niederhelman recounted the great frustration for families coming up against state and city authorities, telling CNN she wanted closure after the horrific week but was not allowed to see bodies at the morgue as she frantically sought to confirm the death of her 12-year-old son, Zachary.

"It just feels as though the officials that orchestrated this whole deal, they really care less. It seems to me that they want to get on to cleanup and maybe start building or whatever," she said.

In what is one of the worst tornado seasons on record after a series of twisters killed hundreds in southern US states last month, Sunday's was the deadliest single tornado to strike America in six decades.

The monster funnel cloud tore apart everything it touched along a path four miles (six kilometers) long and three quarters of a mile (over a kilometer) wide in this city of 50,000.

Crews continue to search through the tangled piles of debris in hope of finding survivors, but hopes were fading after rescuers found no one in the rubble Wednesday -- dead or alive.

Anguished families have kept up a desperate hunt for their missing loved ones. But poor and patchy communications plus the complete devastation of some areas have hampered the search.

Officials said they hoped that by publishing the list of 232 names they could locate the missing and ease the frayed nerves of their families.

"Our goal is to get that number to zero," Spillers said. "We will dedicate as much state resources as needed, around the clock, to make sure that all the family members who have loved ones they cannot find are connected."

The heartbreaking pleas for help and information have been replayed constantly on the local radio and on social networking sites.

But for some the long vigil has already ended in sorrow.

Baby Skyular Logsdon was ripped from his mother's arms by the powerful winds, and his desperate family took to the social networking site Facebook for help to find the 16-month-old.

After several false leads, and three days of waning hopes, his body was found in a morgue late Wednesday.

"We all love you so much and you will be missed by everyone," his aunt posted on the Facebook page that has been inundated with outpourings of support and condolences.

Still missing is Will Norton, the 18-year-old who was sucked out of his father's Hummer as they were driving home from his high school graduation.

Teams of volunteers helped his family perform their own search Thursday in what his aunt Tracey wrote was a day "mixed with nervousness and deep hope."

And in a further sign of tragedy, some whole families were listed as missing, along with at least 15 people from area nursing homes.

There was the Merritt family, missing from South Day Road, ages two, five, eight, 26, and 28.

Also unaccounted for were the Reyes family, with parents Maria and Fredy, and their two girls, aged 3 and 4.

More than 8,000 structures in this town bordering the heartland states of Kansas and Oklahoma were damaged or destroyed when the twister packing winds over 200 miles (320 kilometers) an hour came roaring through with just a 24-minute warning.

Missouri Governor Jay Nixon meanwhile ordered the state's national guard to remove the wasteland of debris left by the tornado in Joplin, a mission he described as an "enormous task" but crucial for the city's recovery.

The Joplin city manager's office also sent a request to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) for assistance in removing the rubble, in a "Clean Sweep" operation that allow workers to take away debris from both private and public property.

Nixon has announced plans for a community memorial service Sunday, the same day that US President Barack Obama is set to visit the city.



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WEATHER REPORT
Missouri town says 232 missing after tornado
Joplin, Missouri (AFP) May 26, 2011
Officials Thursday said 232 people were still missing four days after a tornado tore through a Missouri town, and had only managed to identify one of the 125 bodies found in the storm's wake. Some of the missing from Sunday's disaster in Joplin may be among the unidentified remains being stored in a hastily constructed mass morgue. But officials pleaded with anxious family members for pa ... read more







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