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Families Picking up the Pieces After Enid EF-4 Tornado
Survey teams found several points of EF4 damage as crews continue cleanup and emergency response, with no deaths reported, officials said.
- On Thursday night, a tornado struck Enid, Oklahoma, causing significant damage that the National Weather Service later classified as EF4 with winds estimated at 170 to 175 mph.
- The storm severely impacted the Gray Ridge neighborhood, the hardest-hit area, though Enid Mayor David Mason reported no fatalities and only one injury involving a falling wall.
- Displaced residents may access shelter and assistance at the Chisholm Trail Expo Center at 111 West Perdue Avenue, while Vance Air Force Base remains closed for power and water restoration.
- First responders from the Enid Police Department, Enid Fire Department, and Garfield County Sheriff's office worked under unified command throughout the night to conduct initial search and rescue efforts.
- Cleanup operations expanded today with improved daylight visibility, as Governor Kevin Stitt coordinates with local leaders to assess damage and ensure affected families receive necessary resources and support.
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16 Articles
16 Articles
ENID (AP).- This Thursday in the state of Oklahoma, the United States, a powerful F4-grade tornado destroyed 40 houses and left more than 10 injured. The natural phenomenon occurred in the city of Enid, where several houses were torn from their foundations, shops were closed and hundreds of vehicles were damaged. The tornado remained on land for at least 40 minutes and took more than 14 kilometers with winds of between 273 and 281 kilometers per…
·Buenos Aires, Argentina
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Total News Sources16
Leaning Left3Leaning Right2Center7Last UpdatedBias Distribution58% Center
Bias Distribution
- 58% of the sources are Center
58% Center
L 25%
C 58%
R 17%
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