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5 Dead and Widespread Power Outages After ‘Off the Charts’ Midwest Storms

Hundreds of thousands of customers were without electricity after a powerful storm system called “extraordinary” for December swept across the central U.S.

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A tornado watch was issued for eight states as unusually powerful winds forced the closing of several highways.CreditCredit...Bryon Houlgrave/The Des Moines Register, via Associated Press

A ferocious storm system that swept across the Midwest left hundreds of thousands of customers without electricity on Thursday, with numerous houses, barns and buildings damaged and five people dead in Iowa, Kansas and Minnesota.

Less than a week after a string of deadly tornadoes devastated six states, Wednesday night brought weather that was extremely unusual for the Midwest at this time of year: 70-degree temperatures, wildfires, tornadoes and winds that surpassed 75 miles per hour.

“In the middle of December, it’s obviously extraordinary, unprecedented,” said Mike Fowle, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service, noting that the city of Des Moines broke a record by reaching a temperature of 74 degrees.

Before Wednesday, Mr. Fowle said, there had been only five confirmed tornadoes in the month of December in Iowa, dating back to 1950. On Wednesday alone, there were at least five tornadoes across the state.

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Rubble was cleared from buildings in Hartland, Minn., after a strong storm swept through the town on Wednesday night.Credit...Christian Monterrosa/Associated Press

Storm teams from the National Weather Service were crisscrossing the Midwest on Thursday surveying the damage, and the extent was still coming into full view.

The storm system, which was moving into Canada on Thursday, came five days after tornadoes whipped through Kentucky and five other states, killing at least 88 people, which might have prompted many people in the Midwest to take a cautious approach when faced with storms on Wednesday night.

What prompted the unusual December weather events is unclear. The ingredients that give rise to tornadoes include warm, moist air at ground level; cool dry air higher up; and wind shear, which is the change in wind speed or direction. Each of these factors may be affected differently by climate change.

Residents of communities across Michigan, Wisconsin and Iowa were still struggling with widespread power outages on Thursday. Most were in Michigan, with more than 200,000 customers without power by the evening, according to PowerOutage.us, which aggregates data from utilities across the country. Another 80,000 were still experiencing outages in Wisconsin.

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A home near Bayard, Iowa, was damaged after a band of intense weather that crossed the state on Wednesday.Credit...Bryon Houlgrave/The Des Moines Register, via Associated Press

In western Wisconsin, the Police Department of the city of Stanley wrote on Facebook that there was devastation throughout the community from storms overnight, with roofs of buildings sheared off by winds, streets filled with rubble and power lines downed. As emergency workers and residents worked to clean up on Thursday morning in 24-degree temperatures, a light snow began to fall, with wind gusts of 40 miles per hour predicted.

Deb Chwala, whose family owns a construction business in Stanley, said both of the company’s buildings were “totally flattened.” She was home on Wednesday evening when the storm hit and heard terrifying, howling winds, followed by a roaring sound that sounded like a tornado had descended on the town.

When she and her husband surveyed the damage, they were able to retrieve a computer and other belongings, but the buildings were beyond repair. “It looks like a bomb hit,” she said.

The National Weather Service confirmed on Thursday that a tornado had hit north of Neillsville, Wis., near Stanley.

Of the five deaths, four occurred on the roads. In Kansas, Trooper Mike Racy of the Highway Patrol said that three people had been killed in two separate car crashes on Wednesday, after dust storms had turned driving conditions dangerous.

“Our visibility yesterday was so bad, you could barely see the hood on your vehicle,” he said.

In Iowa, one man was killed after a gust of wind overturned his tractor-trailer on a highway.

Another man, a 65-year-old Minnesota resident, died when he stepped outside for a cigarette during a storm and was found a short time later with a head injury, pinned under a fallen 40-foot tree.

The National Weather Service said there had been at least 55 wind gusts of at least 75 miles per hour across the country on Wednesday, the highest daily number since 2004.

Reported Tornadoes

Tornadoes were reported on Wednesday from about 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. Central time.

Source: National Weather Service (data updated through 9:30 p.m. Central)

The New York Times

In the West and Plains regions, dust storms whipped through Colorado and Kansas, and a tornado was spotted in Lincoln, Neb. Images circulating on social media showed damage to hangars and small planes at the Santa Fe Regional Airport in New Mexico.

The main air traffic control tower at Kansas City International Airport was temporarily evacuated early Wednesday evening because of the storms.

In Iowa, transportation officials shut down bridges and warned drivers to stay off roads. And in Omaha, meteorologists for the Weather Service briefly suspended their work as they sheltered from a storm.

The storm system also spawned wildfires in Kansas with winds of up to 100 m.p.h., the local authorities said.

As storms moved through South Dakota, the Weather Service office in Sioux Falls issued its first tornado warning on record for the month of December.

And in Iowa, where schools closed early and some areas saw wind gusts of up to 90 m.p.h., high temperatures reached the lower 70s. On average, high temperatures in December throughout much of the state are in the 30s, according to the Weather Service.

Julie Bosman is the Chicago bureau chief of The New York Times. She has reported for the Times on the coronavirus pandemic, education, politics, law enforcement and literature. She joined the Times in 2002 as a news assistant in the Washington bureau. More about Julie Bosman

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