Newborn baby killed, dozens injured when tornado strikes North Dakota city
WATFORD CITY, N.D. -- A newborn baby was killed and more than two dozen people were injured when a tornado whipped through a North Dakota oil patch city overnight, overturning recreational vehicles and demolishing more than 100 structures, officials said Tuesday. National Weather Service meteorologist John Paul Martin classified the tornado as an EF2, which is defined by winds speeds between 111 and 135 mph. He said wind speeds reached 127 mph in Watford City.
The storm moved through Watford City, in the northwestern part of the state, shortly after midnight, hitting an RV park the hardest, according to sheriff's officials. About 20 of the reported 28 injured were staying at the Prairie View RV Park where high winds overturned some campers and damaged mobile homes.
CBS Bismarck, North Dakota affiliate KXMB reports the McKenzie County Sheriff's Department said a seven-day-old baby died after being transported earlier to an undisclosed hospital containing advanced life support services. The department notes the family of the child has asked that his name be withheld for now.
North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum will travel to Watford City later today to survey the Prairie View RV, KXMB reports. Burgum plans to meet with local response officials and residents displaced by the storm.
Krystal Lapp, a Prairie View resident, told KXMB she and her husband "house rock and shake, and felt the house go up and felt it slam and then we rolled about three times
"We're going to die. That's what I thought. We're going to die," Lapp said.
Clifford Bowden, 37, was in his recreational vehicle when the storm struck.
"My dog was with me and the next thing you knew the storm picked up my camper and slammed it on the ground. It felt like we were weightless," Bowden said.
"It was scary. I feel like I'm a pretty tough guy. But, this storm, it made me shake uncontrollably," he added.
Schwartzenberger said his onsite commander reported 122 structures in the park were completely destroyed. In addition to those structures, there were 79 with moderate damage and 120 with minor to no damage.
Karolin Jappe, the McKenzie County emergency manager, said the RV park is one of the largest such facilities to spring up during the oil boom and there were some mobile homes on the property.
"It's just like an oversized RV park on steroids," Jappe said.
"There's more devastation than a tornado four years ago. RVs flipped over. Trucks underneath RVs," Jappe said.
Schwartzenberger says his house half a mile from the RV park suffered siding, shingle and hail damage.
"It's a tornado scene," Schwartzenberger said. "It went through and devastated an entire community down there. I'm devastated myself at what has happened. I feel for the families."
Schwartzenberger said the park residents were allowed back Tuesday afternoon to collect their belongings. He said the park would then be shut down and that cleanup operations would resume Wednesday morning.
"Obviously they are going to be stressed out by what they see because it was pitch black when it first happened," Schwartzenberger said. "That is why we are giving people the whole day to go in there. We want people to have the time to get their stuff."
About 150 people, including Bowden, are staying at the Watford City Civic Center where the Red Cross has set up a temporary shelter.
North Dakota Lt. Gov. Brent Sanford, a former Watford City mayor who has a home in the city, and Gov. Doug Burgum surveyed the damage Tuesday and met with local officials and displaced residents. Sanford said the extent of the damage is "devastating and mindboggling, with RVs utterly flattened and destroyed."
In northeastern Montana, officials said a storm with estimated wind speeds over 100 mph tore through part of a town Monday night. Sheridan County Sheriff Heidi Williamson said a microburst with speeds up to 118 mph destroyed at least nine small airplanes at the airport in Plentywood. No injuries were reported.
The storm also uprooted trees, downed power lines and damaged other buildings.