Be Prepared: Tornado Season Continues 

Release Date: April 17, 2007
Release Number: 1686-039

» More Information on Georgia Severe Storms and Tornadoes

CORDELE, Ga. -- As tornado season continues through May, Georgians should remember that a killer storm could strike any time, in-season or out, warn officials of the Georgia Emergency Management Agency (GEMA) and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The season came in strongly in early March, when tornadoes killed nine state residents, left more than 80 injured and caused $118 million in property damage. Then a new wave of severe weather in mid-April brought another reminder.

“Springtime, especially in the Southeast, is the time when warm air from the Gulf is moving north and can set up turbulence that grows deadly,” said Federal Coordinating Officer Michael Bolch, in charge of federal disaster recovery efforts after the March storms for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Nearly 1,800 Georgia households have received federal disaster assistance for the March outbreak.

The tornado season generally continues through May, but the storms can come any time, and anywhere. Six of the recent Georgia deaths were in sparsely populated Baker County, which has only one incorporated town, but the same squall line dropped a funnel sixty miles away in downtown Americus, destroying a 143-bed hospital. Some calculations say that the fifth deadliest tornado in American history occurred in Georgia, when a rare double twister roared through Gainesville in 1936, killing more than 200, many in crowded mills. That storm occurred in April. The state’s second most fatal tornado cluster, in 1998, came in March.

If a tornado strikes, the safest place is in a strong building with no wide spaces under unsupported roofing (last month’s deaths in a high school gym in Alabama remain a tragic reminder). The most secure shelter is in a basement or small interior room. An interior closet or hallway with heavily reinforced walls also might serve as a secure shelter. Seeking refuge under heavy furniture like a desk is advised. Always stay away from windows. Put as many walls as possible between you and the storm outside. Mobile homes do not provide adequate protection from a tornado. Experts also say not to try and outrun one of these storms in a car.

If a tornado finds you in an area with no secure buildings nearby, seek a ditch or depressed area in the ground. Lie flat. Place your hands over your head for protection.

Tornadoes are nature's most violent storms, but their approach may be invisible if they come in the night. Day or night, their unpredictable leaping and hop-scotching from one area to the next makes them stealthy killers, despite their deafening roar.

Planning and practicing specifically how and where to take shelter from a tornado is a matter of survival. Be prepared to act quickly.

Tornado Survival Skills

Stay Informed

For tips on disaster planning visit the Georgia Emergency Management Agency website www.gema.state.ga.us, or the Department of Homeland Security's www.ready.gov.

FEMA coordinates the federal government’s role in preparing for, preventing, mitigating the effects of, responding to, and recovering from all domestic disasters, whether natural or man-made, including acts of terror.

Last Modified: Tuesday, 17-Apr-2007 10:15:43