CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Wednesday brought the WCNC Charlotte viewing area's first tornado warning of the year -- and 14 of them in one day, at that.
Tornado warnings for Burke, Caldwell, Alexander and McDowell counties have expired. A tornado watch expired at midnight for areas west of Charlotte, including the foothills.
Tornado warnings were first activated for Burke, McDowell and Caldwell counties around 7:45 p.m. Wednesday, prompting the WCNC Charlotte weather team to advise residents to seek shelter. The warnings have all since expired.
WCNC Charlotte Chief Meteorologist Brad Panovich tracked the line of storms associated with a cold front pushing out of Tennessee and into the Carolinas. Panovich said that line could combine with instability in the atmosphere, creating the ingredients for strong thunderstorms.
Earlier Wednesday evening, the city of Morganton said approximately 1,000 customers were without power in the northern part of the city due to a tree that had fallen on a power line on Kirksey Drive following the rain and wind conditions. Just before 9 p.m., the city said crews had restored power to most customers impacted by the outage.
At 9 p.m. Wednesday, Duke Energy had roughly 900 outages reported in the Hickory area. By midnight, those outages were resolved, but another 400 were reported around Marion.
Panovich was also monitoring the significant tornado parameters, which measures the potential for rotation in storms, as well as the supercell parameter from the Storm Prediction Center.
Indian Land Schools announced some schools would dismiss students early due to the threat of severe weather. Buford Middle School, Buford High School, Andrew Jackson Middle School, Andrew Jackson High School, and Indian Land Middle School were dismissed at noon on Wednesday. Lancaster High, AR Rucker Middle School, South Middle School dismissed at 12:30 p.m., and Indian Land High School dismissed at 1 p.m.
What to do if your area falls under a tornado warning
Severe weather requires some preparation in advance, even when it's not the season for storms. Knowing what you can do when tornado warnings are issued will help you, no matter where you are.
At home
When at home, you and your family need to go to their safe place. First, go to the lowest level of your home immediately. A basement is ideal, but if you don't have one, find the most interior room of your house away from windows.
Crouch on the floor and cover your head as much as you can. If you have helmets, put them on.
Your safe place should have a flashlight, as well as food and water. You should always wear shoes because if there is damage, you may have to walk through nails or broken glass.
In an apartment or condo
The same rules apply if you live in an apartment or condo building. Get to the lowest level, but use the stairs since an elevator could lose power. A place like under the staircase, an interior hallway or a room with no windows is your safe place. Crouch and cover your head.
In your car
One of the worst places you can be during a tornado is in your car. This is the riskiest place to be during a tornado. If the tornado is far enough away you can drive away from it at 90-degree angles until you find a safe place. If it is nearby, DO NOT try to outrun it. Instead, pull over. Keep your seatbelt on and duck below the winds and cover your head.
An EF1 tornado can push a car and an EF2 can lift it off the road. DO NOT seek shelter under a bridge or overpass. Flying debris tends to move even faster, making it more dangerous.
At work or out shopping
Most importantly, don't panic. Be mindful of others and move as quickly and safely as possible to an interior bathroom or storage room. Any enclosed place away from windows is your target. Some establishments will have a marked tornado shelter.
Out in the open
If you are out in the open, and there is no nearby shelter, find the lowest-lying area away from trees and anything that could produce debris. Lay flat on the ground and put your hands behind your head.
Theater or house of worship
If a tornado warning sounds while you are in a house of worship like a church or synagogue, or if you're at the theater, you'll want to find the lowest interior room without windows. But if there is no time, hide under the pews or seats.
Mobile home
If a car is a bad place to be during a tornado, a mobile home is even worse. This is because mobile homes don't have the foundation a house does, meaning tornado deaths are more common for those who live in mobile homes.
Your only option is to get out of the mobile home and run to a tornado shelter nearby.
What you need in an emergency kit
The first step in making sure that you and your family are prepared for severe weather is pledging to prepare. This includes developing a family emergency and communications plan. In short, know what to do before severe weather strikes by creating an emergency plan today.
Your family may not be together when a disaster strikes, so it is important to plan in advance: how you will get to a safe place; how you will contact one another; how you will get back together; and what you will do in different situations.
Ready NC has made a simple preparedness kit list you can get together well in advance:
- First Aid kit
- Cash (power outages mean banks and ATMs may be unavailable)
- Road maps
- Battery-operated radio
- Flashlight
- Extra batteries
- Important documents and records (Photos, IDs, proof of residence, etc)
- Three-day supply of non-perishable food items
- One gallon of bottled water per person, per day
- Coolers for food and ice storage
- Fire extinguisher
- Blankets
- Sleeping bags
- Extra clothing
- Extra medications and prescriptions
- Hearing aids and other specialty medical items
- Eyeglasses and sunglasses
- Toilet paper
- Clean-up supplies
- Duct tape
- Tarp
- Rope
- Can opener
- Knife
- Tools
- Booster cables
- Baby, elderly and pet supplies if necessary
- Cell phone chargers
- Family communication plan with emergency contact information
- Maps of the area