


Image from Shutterstock.Ī Missouri woman whose husband and two young children died when they took shelter from a massive Joplin tornado at a local Home Depot in 2011 has filed a wrongful death suit against the store, the company that designed it and the property owner.Įdie Howard Housel contends that the defendants were negligent in constructing a big-box building with walls that too easily toppled and a roof that wasn’t adequately connected to the walls. This is what it looked like when they got started.Joplin, Missouri, on May 21, 2011. In some views of the storm’s aftermath, there is wreckage as far as the eye can see.Įven six years later, the town is still rebuilding. Some of the structural casualties included a hospital and the local high school. Joplin’s twister destroyed thousands of homes and hundreds of businesses, and created 3 million cubic yards of debris. … You could feel it, almost like a cosmic tug of war between good and evil.” Although previous tornadoes she had experienced sounded like trains, “This one sounded like World War III. Teacher and Joplin resident Raye Frerer told the New York Times that on that Sunday, she and her husband sat on the floor of their bathroom with a mattress over their heads. Read: NASA Images Show Night Lights on Earth It wasn't even raining.” Fluharty survived by taking shelter in a walk-in freezer at the restaurant. When the alarms sounded, residents “went outside to look and it was so wide, it looked like a thunderstorm," Daniel Fluharty told CNN about his experience, which began while he was at work at a Pizza Hut. Although the National Weather Service said there was a warning nearly 20 minutes before the storm entered the town, CNN reported, false alarms over the years deterred people from taking shelter. Part of what made the Joplin tornado so devastating was how unprepared people were. Before the modern records, the worst in 1925 and killed nearly 700 people as it blasted through three states. Still, Joplin’s tornado was the deadliest on the list, NOAA’s National Weather Service said, surpassing a record held since 1953. In the last several decades, some years had multiple EF5 tornadoes while other times there were stretches of a few years without one.

Such a wave is not entirely unheard of - April 3, 1974, saw seven EF5 tornadoes, for example. However, six of those alone were in April and May 2011. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Storm Prediction Center said there have been fewer than 60 of those twisters since 1950 when the country started keeping such records, with only nine of them in this century. Thankfully, such fierce tornadoes are relatively rare: The U.S. Entire neighborhoods were leveled in Joplin, a town of about 50,000 people. An EF5 has wind speeds higher than 200 mph. The damage the tornado left behind was intense. The EF5 twister, reaching the most destructive rating on the tornado scale, killed more than 150 people and injured many more on May 22, 2011. Six years have passed since a massive tornado crashed down on Joplin, Missouri, carving a path of destruction as it wove its way through the town. A tornado that blasted through Joplin, Missouri, May 22, 2011, left whole streets in ruins.
