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Sterling Disaster Survey Report
October 5th, 1995, Mini -
Tornado Outbreak
by Barry S. Goldsmith
Meteorologist, National
Weather Service Forecast Office
Sterling, VA
On the evening of October 5th, 1995, a series of
tornadoes struck east-central Maryland as the remnants of Hurricane Opal
moved through the Mid-Atlantic region. At least three separate tornadoes
were spawned by a powerful rotating thunderstorm between 8:30 and 9:45 PM
EDT; a fourth, thus far unconfirmed, may have touched down in northeastern
Maryland between 10:15 and 10:45 PM EDT. Other weaker rotating
thunderstorms along the line spawned two additional twisters - in
Leonardtown (St Mary's County) and Arnold (Anne Arundel County). All
storms were moving at speeds of 40 to 50 mph.
1. Charles County - Between Ironside and
Grayton
Time: 8:35 to 8:37 PM
Intensity: Weak F1 (70 to 95 mph)
Path length: 1.5 miles
Path width: 100 yards
Warning in effect: Tornado warning, issued at
8:25 PM
Lead time: 10 to 12 minutes
Preliminary damage estimate: $25,000 to property
2. Prince George's County - Camp Springs
Time: 8:59 to 9:03 PM
Intensity: Strong F2 (150 mph)
Path length: 2.5 miles
Path width: 200 yards
Warning in effect: Tornado warning, issued at
8:53 PM
Lead time: 6 to 10 minutes
Preliminary damage estimate: $5 million to
property
3. Anne Arundel County - Odenton - Glen
Burnie
Time: 9:31 to 9:39 PM
Intensity: Strong F1 (110 mph)
Path length: 6 miles
Path width: 100 yard average; up to 200 yards at
some locations
Warning in effect: Tornado warning, issued at
9:27 PM
Lead time: 4 to 12 minutes
Preliminary damage estimate: $250,000 to property
Resident assessment of NWS warnings
Charles County...
Only one person experienced the tornado and she
had just arrived home and had loaded groceries into her house. She did not
have the opportunity to hear the warning.
Prince Georges County...
While some were caught by surprise, others were
home watching television and caught the warning just before the tornado
hit. The Prince Georges County director of the Office of Emergency
Preparedness said he saw the warning on television and immediately called
into the communications center and to start the response and rescue
efforts before the confirmation calls even began to come into 911. He said
the warning allowed them to be on the scene in just minutes, rescuing
people trapped in their homes. There were several injuries but only three
had to be sent to the hospital and none were serious.
Anne Arundel County...
Residents indicated they were aware of a tornado
moving their way. Even those who were watching movies or non-EBS activated
television were alerted by friends or relatives to the possibility of a
tornado moving "from Bowie to the Odenton-Severn-Glen Burnie"
area. In general, the residents in the Quarterfield Farms subdivision had
just enough time to take protective action; residents in Odenton received
the warning (from television crawls) as the storm struck.
Interviews with residents also showed how
important within-county locations are in the text of a tornado warning.
The impression they left me with was "the warning said
SEVERN...that's US!!" Residents may have been less
inclined to take action had only the county been used as a location
identifier. The NWS office in Sterling is currently testing software which
will facilitate the inclusion of city/town locations for severe
thunderstorm or tornado warnings.
The only element of surprise expressed to me was
how fast the tornado arrived after the warning was received...in general,
one to five minutes after it was EBS-activated. Most residents saw the
crawl between 9:29 and 9:31 PM ("just as Seinfeld ended, as
one resident put it).
The fact is, radar indicated that the storm had
weakened over central Prince George's County, and re-intensified just
before crossing the Patuxent River. This is borne out by the fact that
there no damage reports have been received from densely populated Bowie,
where the parent thunderstorm moved through less than 10 minutes before
striking Odenton.
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