By Adriana Navarro Darien McGee had been heading to the bathroom when winds akin to “a force of God” knocked him into the room. The EF4 tornado that struck Rolling Fork, Mississippi, on March 24 roared overhead, tearing McGee’s house to rubble. “It was like a force of God. The same force that came through
As many as 26 people were killed in Mississippi and Alabama as the massive tornado ripped through several towns, leaving several injured. In Rolling Fork, homes were reduced to piles of rubble and cars were flipped on their sides.
we did have state agencies and the us forestry was there. i didn t see a lot of federal agencies but that is probably because they were moving slower after the emergency declaration in that kind of thing. the mississippi in that kind of thing. tue: mississippi emergency in that kind of thing. tte: mississippi emergency emergency is always a prepared for things like this because we do tend to have rough disasters in mississippi so they have been orchestrating the whole thing and doing a good job of mitigating some of the response. mitigating some of the response- mitigating some of the resonse. h , ., response. let s show you live ictures response. let s show you live pictures now response. let s show you live pictures now coming - response. let s show you live pictures now coming in. - response. let s show you live i pictures now coming in. there, the percentile epicentre of the percentile epicentre of the tornado, you can see cars driving through that with the trees failed
President Joe Biden issued an emergency declaration for Mississippi early Sunday, making federal funding available to the areas hardest hit Friday night by a deadly tornado.
President Joe Biden issued an emergency declaration for Mississippi early Sunday, making federal funding available to the areas hardest hit Friday night by a deadly tornado.