At least six people have died in an Amazon warehouse collapse in Illinois after a tornado caused major structural damage to the building, officials sayhttps://t.co/X1HusVijQupic.twitter.com/qXOe531eMD
45 workers at the warehouse were reunited with loved ones overnight. 1 worker is hospitalized with serious injuries. Response effort is over. Recovery effort going on.
It’s unclear how many employees are unaccounted for. Shift change was in process, trucks coming and going, cited as reasons why. No one from @amazon is in attendance at news conference.
The company with one of the most sophisticated logistics systems in the world can’t say how many employees are still unaccounted for nearly 24 hours after the tornado hit its warehouse?? https://t.co/G0zexVI1P1
My heart grieves for the families and friends for those that died due to last night's storm. Especially those that were sheltering in place while at work. I humbly ask that @TheDemocrats and the @GOP to come together to draft legislation that makes it mandatory that large
buildings, like the @Amazon Warehouse in Edwardsville, IL and the candle factory in Mayfield, KY have storm shelters built for their workers. I worked at a Best Buy when we had a tornado rip through a nearby county and I knew if it had hit us, that those steel girders would not
Withstand a moderately strong winds. The Amazon warehouse can attest to that. Please, let's protect our blue-collar workers, let's get them somewhere safe to shelter in place.
BREAKING: Kentucky Republican Thomas Massie is calling for emergency aid for his district following the tornadoes in Kentucky despite the fact that he’s voted against emergency aid for everyone else his entire time in Congress.
Filed under [HEROES] at the Daily Beast, this WaPo story tells the tale of how even tho a tornado was a direct hit on a nursing home, all but one of the residents survived:
Workers in an Arkansas nursing home that took a direct hit by a tornado saved the helpless residents by gathering them together in a hallway, barricading glass doors with mattresses, covering their bodies with their own, and leading hymns to stay calm https://t.co/jrMIMKH8yb
A decades-old family photo from a home in Kentucky turned up more than 150 miles away in Indiana after the deadly tornado outbreak. https://t.co/r5xsIS5e6s
Autumn Kirks and her boyfriend were working the night shift at the Mayfield candle factory when the tornado struck. Her boyfriend is still missing. https://t.co/eqraN78Mes
Kyanna Parsons-Perez, an employee at the Mayfield, Kentucky, candle factory described being buried under five feet of debris after a tornado ripped the building apart. https://t.co/QQUdlOG20Qpic.twitter.com/vGyrilo2K5
Inside what was once a candle factory, dozens of workers were trapped when the most powerful tornado in the history of Kentucky -- and possibly of the entire United States -- rumbled through like a freight train Friday night
✍️ @cyjAFP https://t.co/nmgXo0y80wpic.twitter.com/0H2zqpit3Q
— Breaking Weather by AccuWeather (@breakingweather) December 12, 2021
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear: "I wish I understood why we've gotten hit by the pandemic, historic ice storm, flooding, and now the worst tornado in our history... what I do know is that in Kentucky, we're good people." https://t.co/6Jy0udWMfypic.twitter.com/iBIxzgyHXB
Political leaders continued to weigh in on the destruction wrought by tornadoes in the middle of the U.S. “The level of devastation is unlike anything I have ever seen,” said Gov. Andy Beshear of Kentucky, who was touring some of the hardest-hit places. https://t.co/z6NQPJswpU
#UPDATE US emergency workers Sunday searched for survivors of ferocious tornadoes that killed at least 94 across several states and left towns in ruins, including in the debris of a Kentucky candle factory, a symbol of the devastation
✍️@cyjAFP https://t.co/a4yNSwfqbBpic.twitter.com/bXhFBPRdeN
Celebrity chef José Andrés jetted from Washington, D.C., to Kentucky on Saturday night to provide food for those devastated by the tornadoes that hit the region.https://t.co/EfydQVnRHA
I am praying for the lives lost and communities impacted by the tornado devastation throughout the Commonwealth of Kentucky. Thank you to our brave first responders. I will work to aid our communities with the federal funding and resources they need to rebuild. My full statement: pic.twitter.com/ZNqisgBCFn
MYTH BUST: Tornadoes can, in fact, cross a river. And keep going. And then cross a river again. And keep going. Rivers do not protect you from tornadoes.
This is the track of the EF-3 tornado in St. Charles, St. Louis, and St. Charles (again) counties. pic.twitter.com/aOcTyxwLUi
Crazy Weather!! Tornado in Arkansas and near St. Louis, Missouri - USA! ... https://t.co/zBJfDyWsVO via @YouTube
Friday night 9 tornadoes ripped through five states, including mine. One of them hit 10 miles from my house so I just try to be grateful every day. We were lucky.
I live in Arkansas and basements aren't much of a thing even though we get hit by tornadoes. A lot of people have storm shelters though. Also, my cousin was in St. Louis preforming The Nutcracker and they stopped the show twice bc tornado sirens.
Like I have said a million times already today: not a single warning went out until the radar had the system right on top of us. I live right down the road from this, I got the same amount of warning as they did, which was hardly any at all.
— christina @ destiny 2 lore hurt me (@_jetpackbluess_) December 11, 2021
Ok, so, I’m going to say both of these things very slowly, so you can understand how this all happened. One, we got very little warning of the tornado, possibly because the NWS office in St Louis had to shelter because of a tornado.
— christina @ destiny 2 lore hurt me (@_jetpackbluess_) December 12, 2021
Two, the tornado itself *formed directly on top of the warehouse*. Now, combine that with the minimal warning and you have a complete recipe for disaster. You can risk management all you want, but when it comes to tornadoes, it can end up being a crapshoot.
— christina @ destiny 2 lore hurt me (@_jetpackbluess_) December 12, 2021
and here's another thread with a similarly aggravated lady to the last:
I replied to someone's comment about hurricane and tornado forecasting and quoted the article they shared. You know damn well workers in St. Louis or Madison County aren't generally sent home for tornado warnings. We don't have to like that, but it's the truth. Get over yourself.
This is truth: midwest tornado watches and warnings are so frequent in summer and fall it becomes a "cry wolf" thing; either nothing happens or it doesn't come anywhere near you. Unless the radio warns at the last minute you are directly in the path - which you do listen for and in which case you run like hell to shelter - if you took every watch and warning as a serious risk, you'd be spending a heckuva lot of time in shelter for no reason. Serious hits are just not that predictable and very rarely such a wide path of destruction. It's usually a very low risk crap shoot and those few who bet wrong lose. And in December? "No way, never" is what most people probably thought.
Presumably someone's still waiting for the Japanese to attack Hawaii again from the northwest without radio contact.
Black Swans are by definition unpredictable, or if not quite a Black Swan but a statistical outlier, it still doesn't much matter - we can't in general live our lives preparing 100% for things that almost never happen. Sure, the easy fixes can help - meaning involving little money, time or logistics/disruption of workflow. Otherwise, we try to do warnings and that's it.
“I’m a tornado climatologist, and it is not unusual for people to ask me after a spate of storms like the ones that ripped through the center of the country on Friday whether climate change has anything to do with it,” says @JBElsner. “It’s complicated.” https://t.co/V1Bb5u3E6G
Comments
by artappraiser on Sat, 12/11/2021 - 8:07pm
by artappraiser on Sat, 12/11/2021 - 8:12pm
by artappraiser on Sat, 12/11/2021 - 9:02pm
by artappraiser on Sun, 12/12/2021 - 4:10pm
Filed under [HEROES] at the Daily Beast, this WaPo story tells the tale of how even tho a tornado was a direct hit on a nursing home, all but one of the residents survived:
by artappraiser on Sun, 12/12/2021 - 5:46pm
by artappraiser on Sun, 12/12/2021 - 5:51pm
by artappraiser on Sun, 12/12/2021 - 6:01pm
by artappraiser on Sun, 12/12/2021 - 6:09pm
MAP:
by artappraiser on Sun, 12/12/2021 - 6:14pm
by artappraiser on Sun, 12/12/2021 - 6:37pm
Mitch's formal statement:
by artappraiser on Sun, 12/12/2021 - 6:52pm
In case you were wondering: Gov. Beshear and his Lt. Gov. are Democrats
by artappraiser on Mon, 12/13/2021 - 5:11am
by artappraiser on Sun, 12/12/2021 - 6:59pm
re: on thread about the Amazon warehouse
by artappraiser on Mon, 12/13/2021 - 5:28am
and here's another thread with a similarly aggravated lady to the last:
This is truth: midwest tornado watches and warnings are so frequent in summer and fall it becomes a "cry wolf" thing; either nothing happens or it doesn't come anywhere near you. Unless the radio warns at the last minute you are directly in the path - which you do listen for and in which case you run like hell to shelter - if you took every watch and warning as a serious risk, you'd be spending a heckuva lot of time in shelter for no reason. Serious hits are just not that predictable and very rarely such a wide path of destruction. It's usually a very low risk crap shoot and those few who bet wrong lose. And in December? "No way, never" is what most people probably thought.
by artappraiser on Mon, 12/13/2021 - 5:46am
Presumably someone's still waiting for the Japanese to attack Hawaii again from the northwest without radio contact.
Black Swans are by definition unpredictable, or if not quite a Black Swan but a statistical outlier, it still doesn't much matter - we can't in general live our lives preparing 100% for things that almost never happen. Sure, the easy fixes can help - meaning involving little money, time or logistics/disruption of workflow. Otherwise, we try to do warnings and that's it.
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 12/13/2021 - 7:13am
by artappraiser on Thu, 12/16/2021 - 2:33am
Empath on duty:
by artappraiser on Fri, 12/17/2021 - 12:29am