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Tornado Rips Pensacola; Storms Sweep Through Panhandle
Watches, Warnings Posted As Storms Move East
POSTED: 12:13 pm EDT October 18,
2007
UPDATED: 5:53 pm EDT October 18,
2007
PENSACOLA, Fla. -- A tornado damaged a church, a daycare center and the city's major shopping mall Thursday as violent thunderstorms made their way across the western Florida Panhandle. There were no reports of injuries.The twister damaged roofs of several homes and buildings in downtown Pensacola and tossed debris around. It first touched down around 11:15 a.m. EDT.Escambia County sheriff's spokesman Glenn Austin said the Greater Little Rock Baptist Church's roof was damaged, as was its daycare center. But children there had been moved to safety before the tornado struck, he said.
"They heard the warnings, grabbed the kids and followed the drill," he said.Near the church, Leeann Franzonne said she and her 3-year-old son, Gabriel, stood on their porch and watched as the tornado formed and dipped into the nearby trees. They took shelter inside when the tornado approached."It sounded creepy, like a bunch of cars were driving over my house," Franzonne said about an hour later as emergency crews directed traffic through her neighborhood and worked to restore power. A section of twisted metal from the church hung over a power line in the Franzonne's yard.At the Cordova Mall, Dillard's stock manager Eddie English Jr. said he heard the wind outside the department store suddenly speed up and get louder, and noticed tree branches flying through the air as he looked through the glass doors into the parking lot."It was all of a sudden. It was just normal raining, then the wind started," English said.The twister "felt like an earthquake," said Lindsey Lassiter, manager of the mall's Express for Men store. She said the ceiling in her store was damaged and that water was pouring in.Officials at a hospital across the street from the mall said no wounded shoppers had been brought to their emergency room. Another hospital also reported no injuries.Jack Cullen, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Mobile, Ala., confirmed that it was a tornado that touched down."It wasn't on the ground very long, just a matter of minutes. Then it went back up and now it has kind of weakened," he said.Austin said some Pensacola Beach homes reported wind damage from storms earlier in the day.In downtown Pensacola, electricity was out and streets were filled with several inches of water from rain that began around dawn.The storms caused forecasters to issue several severe weather warnings, including more tornado warnings."I've seen this pattern before, where it looks real nasty out west. As it moves through the Tallahassee area and gets to the Live Oak/Lake City area, they fade away," Channel 4 senior meteorologist John Gaughan said Thursday at 5 p.m. "If that's the case, Friday won't be so bad."Gaughan predicted a 60 percent chance of rain and isolated thunderstorms, with a possibility of severe weather before dry, cooler air comes in by Saturday morning.
Copyright 2007 by News4Jax.com. The Associated Press contributed to this report. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Copyright 2007 by News4Jax.com. The Associated Press contributed to this report. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.











