Associated Press
Published: January 20,2017
Residents began to clean up damage Friday morning left behind by a tornado in a southern Mississippi community a day earlier.
The
National Weather Service confirmed an EF2 tornado struck Simpson and
Smith counties, but no injuries were reported. Meteorologist Latrice
Maxie said a storm assessment team reported the twister hit Simpson
County, east of Magee, between 7:45 a.m. and 8:15 a.m. Thursday before
tracking into Smith County.
Smith County Emergency Management officials confirmed trees were downed west of Raleigh and a few homes were damaged.
(MORE: Severe Weather Outbreak Possible This Weekend)
Michael
Koehn said he saw the twister tear through his rural community of Pine
Grove, not far from Magee. Koehn said the tornado damaged about 25 homes
and businesses in Magee, he said, including the small business where he
makes and stores wooden furniture.
"My neighbor lost his house
completely. A lot of roofs are uncovered, a lot of trees are down,"
Koehn said. "It was a tornado; I heard the wind. It was a howl like you
knew you were in something."
Photos posted on social media by residents and area news outlets showed roofs torn from buildings and multiple fallen trees.
Elsewhere,
the agency said heavy rains were threatening to collapse Gayle Evans
Lake Dam, located west of Brookhaven, Mississippi, near U.S. 84. A dam
failure would send as much as 5 feet of water over the highway,
forecasters said.
(MORE: Where January Tornadoes Are Most Likely)
More
than 3 inches of rain fell in Louisiana early Thursday and an
additional 5 inches of rain was possible, the weather service said on
Twitter and its website.
In Baton Rouge, a police officer and
another man worked together to push a stranded car off a flooded road.
More than a dozen roads were closed because of rising water, along with a
few schools and government offices.
Forecasters issued flash
flood watches and warnings across southern Louisiana, and more could be
needed as the storms moved eastward.
The rains could help ease
drought conditions that are still plaguing much of the region. The
driest areas are in the northern counties of Alabama and Georgia, which
the National Drought Mitigation Center still lists as being in an
extreme drought.
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