‘Tornado Outbreak’ Devastates Ohio Communities
Updated 6/18/19: FEMA issued a Presidential Major Disaster Declaration for areas in Ohio affected by severe storms, straight-line winds, tornadoes, flooding, landslides and mudslides that took place May 27-29, 2019.
Disaster Alert
May 28, 2019
Source: National Public Radio (NPR)
Approximate locations containing property damage:
Indiana
- Huntsville (Madison County, 46064)
- Pendleton (Madison County, 46013, 46064)
Ohio
- Beavercreek (Greene County, 45305, 45324, 45430, 45431, 45432, 45434, 45440)
- Brookville (Montgomery County, 45309)
- Dayton (Montgomery County, 45390, 45402, 45403, 45404, 45404, 45405, 45406, 45409, 45410, 45414, 45415, 45416, 45417, 45419, 45420, 45423, 45424, 45426, 45429, 45430, 45431, 45432, 45433, 45434, 45439, 45440, 45449, 45458, 45459, 45479)
- Celina (Mercer County, 45822)
- Laura (Miami County, 45337)
- Laurelville (Miami County, 43135)
- New Madison (Darke County, 45346)
- Trotwood (Montgomery County, 45309, 45315, 45406, 45415, 45416, 45417, 45426)
- Vandalia (Montgomery County, 45371, 45377, 45414)
NOTE: This is not currently a FEMA Declared Disaster.
Several tornadoes touched down in highly populated areas of Dayton and other Ohio communities late Monday night, causing catastrophic damage. The storms devastated dozens of buildings and trees. One death has been reported, officials said Tuesday morning.
The National Weather Service says that “at least an EF3 tornado with winds up to 140 mph” struck the city of Beavercreek in Greene County, Ohio. It says similar winds hit Trotwood in Montgomery County — and that it’s too early to know whether the same tornado passed through those counties. On the tornado strength scale, an EF3 is designated as “severe.”
As it announced those designations, the NWS office in Wilmington said it’s still analyzing the storm’s effects in other areas.
The lone reported death occurred in Celina in Mercer County, where Melvin Dale Hanna, 81, was killed during the storm “as the direct result of a vehicle entering his house,” Celina Mayor Jeffrey Hazel announced Tuesday.
“Frankly, back in the neighborhood, there’s areas that looked really like a war zone,” Hazel said after visiting one devastated area. “So it’s a tough one in there.”
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine toured the damage Tuesday, calling the damage “devastating” on Twitter and adding that dozens of homes have been destroyed.
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