Tornado-spawning storms leave 25 dead
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Storm pounds parts of North Texas
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More severe storms are expected to roll across the central U.S. this week following the weather-related deaths of more than two dozen people.
Thousands are still without power as more severe weather may batter areas already devastated by weekend storms.
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The Jackson, Kentucky, office is one of at least four such facilities across the country that is so short-staffed that it is no longer routinely operating 24/7.
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Kentucky was hardest hit as a devastating tornado damaged hundreds of homes and left many homeless. At least 19 people were killed.
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After rain every day of the weekend, more precipitation is in store Monday, according to the National Weather Service’s Fort Worth office.
At least seven people are dead in Missouri after strong supercell storms that spurred tornado warnings slammed into St. Louis on Friday. Two others died in Virginia.
Severe weather leaves 28 dead, including at least 19 in storm-battered Kentucky. Storms Friday afternoon tore roofs off buildings, ripped bricks off of siding and downed trees and power lines.
On May 18, Beshear confirmed the death of an adult woman from Russell County, which is 116 miles south of Louisville, bringing Kentucky's confirmed death toll up to 19, according to his post on X. The victim's age was not disclosed.
The line of severe storms that rocked Michigan produced a total of nine tornadoes, the National Weather Service reports.
As of 2:45 p.m. Sunday, 560 flights had been delayed and one had been canceled at DIA, according to flight tracking software from FlightAware.