RALEIGH, N.C., (Reuters) – Three days of severe storms and tornadoes in the southern United States have killed at least 39 people, with hundreds of homes damaged or destroyed, officials said today.
North Carolina accounted for the bulk of casualties and property losses, with 22 people killed and more than 80 others injured. Significant damage was reported in at least 15 counties and power was out to more than 200,000 people.
Seven people died as a result of the storms in Alabama, seven died in Arkansas and one died in Mississippi, and two people were killed in Oklahoma when a tornado flattened buildings.
It appeared to be the deadliest U.S. storm since February 2008, when 57 people died from tornadoes in the south and Ohio Valley, said AccuWeather.com meteorologist Andy Mussoline, who said the 39 death roll may change.
“I would expect that total to rise, unfortunately,” Mussoline said.
The storms began in Oklahoma on Thursday and then moved through the South and the East Coast. There were 241 tornadoes reported, with 50 confirmed.
North Carolina Governor Beverly Perdue declared a state of emergency on Saturday night and the National Weather Service confirmed at least eight tornadoes in the state.
Statewide, high winds destroyed 60 homes and damaged 400 others, said Julia Jarema, a spokeswoman for the North Carolina Division of Emergency Management.
“Many communities have downed trees, downed power lines and a significant amount of debris on the roadways,” Doug Hoell, the head of emergency services, said late on Saturday.
Progress Energy <PGN.N>, the main utility in eastern North Carolina, said 220,000 customers were without electricity at the peak of the storm, with 78,000 homes and utilities still without power on Sunday morning.
The storm snapped hundreds of power poles and 30 transmission structures were damaged, company spokesman Mike Hughes said. In some areas, twisters swept up poles and wires and dropped them elsewhere.
“There are some parts where a tornado took the utility structure away and we cannot find it,” Hughes said.