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Alabama Tornadoes 2011: Most Twister Victims Knew Storm Was Coming, Study Says

AP  |  By Posted: 04/27/2012 4:34 am Updated: 04/27/2012 11:25 am

ATLANTA (AP) — Most of the victims of last year's epic tornado outbreak in the U.S. state of Alabama had at least one thing in common: They knew the storm was coming.

A year after the onslaught of dozens of twisters killed at least 250 people in Alabama and more elsewhere in the South, federal researchers are completing a study of who died and where they were when it happened. Among the conclusions so far: Nearly half of the people who died had been advised to take shelter. Indeed, most of them did.

But many of the tornadoes were so fierce that few structures were able to withstand them.

"These were catastrophic winds that could destroy pretty much anything in its path," Cindy Chiu, an epidemic intelligence service officer, said in reporting preliminary findings this month at a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention conference in Atlanta.

Unlike in other tornado outbreaks, the largest group of people who died were in single-family houses — not mobile homes — the CDC analysis found.

The April 27, 2011, outbreak involved 62 tornadoes that stretched along ground-hugging tracks that covered more than 1,000 miles. Fatalities were reported from central Alabama to far north Alabama.

While many who heard the warnings sought shelter, others took their chances and lost.

The American Red Cross shares disaster data with the CDC, including what was gathered in extensive interviews with families of the deceased.

Relatives of an 80-year-old woman from Lawrence County "notified her of impending storm — asked her to go to storm shelter next door. She refused, said if her time to go, she would."

The wife of a 35-year-old man from Franklin County heard the warning on TV, according to another vignette provided by Chiu. "She and sons went to basement of neighbors. He stayed in the home," the vignette states. "Tornado struck (at) 330pm and he was found 30 mins later near a tree. He was badly injured and died in the hospital."

The CDC has been examining reports of 255 deaths, including a few for which no Alabama death certificate has been found yet. It's possible a few people were injured in Alabama but died in hospitals in nearby states, Chiu said.

For 120 of those 255, the CDC determined whether the victims knew of the coming tornadoes ahead of time. And 105 were warned.

Of those, 70 took some kind of protective action, like covering themselves or going to what they thought was a safer location or room — including 45 who sought proper shelter, like a basement or interior room on the lowest floor possible. Nineteen were in bathrooms, 10 in basements, 10 in bedrooms and 10 in hallways and smaller numbers in other rooms.

The average age of those who died was 50, and a third of the deaths were people 65 and older, the CDC found.

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ATLANTA (AP) — Most of the victims of last year's epic tornado outbreak in Alabama had at least one thing in common: They knew the storm was coming. A year after the onslaught of doze...
ATLANTA (AP) — Most of the victims of last year's epic tornado outbreak in Alabama had at least one thing in common: They knew the storm was coming. A year after the onslaught of doze...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
powder chowder
☮ Peace: the final frontier...
01:07 PM on 04/30/2012
manditory building codes in tornado alley should include at the very least a small underground storm shelter.
12:59 AM on 04/28/2012
I've had to choose between bad choices when a siren sounded.
Several times I lay in ditches. Iron bathtub has another choice.
I'm still present. Others aren't.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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10:45 PM on 04/27/2012
I can't imagine living in a part of the country where tornadoes or hurricanes are a yearly threat. If I had to I would hope I could afford a storm shelter in my backyard. I live where cold temps and blizzards can be life threatening but we know they are coming and can just stay home, and hope the power doesn't go out. And even these are way less frequent now. Also, the power companies are used to this and power going out doesn't happen very often, except in high winds.
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KarmaPatrol
Riverboat Gambler, satellite whisperer. Independe
12:34 PM on 04/27/2012
45 of the victims were in what was deemed "adequate" protection; sounds like they may need to revisit their local building codes if these powerful storms become the norm.
02:11 AM on 04/28/2012
Yep. If your builder boasts that he builds code compliant, that means if it were any worse it would be illegal. Always exceed the code requirements (for structure, fire resistance, energy, health, etc) if you can. The codes are based on resisting the "hundred year" thunderstorms and hurricanes, but those are coming far more frequently now, soon about once a decade and sometimes the storms are stronger than that minimum design standard. NO structures are required to survive a direct hit from a tornado intact, the hope is that there will be some small space in it that can keep folks from being killed when the rest of the building goes, but there is no code requirement for that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
powder chowder
☮ Peace: the final frontier...
01:09 PM on 04/30/2012
there should be a requirement.