Storms in Midwest tote rains, tornado

Wisconsin twister levels 25 homes

— Central Indiana residents fled flooded neighborhoods Tuesday, while those in a small town in Wisconsin tried to figure out why a warning siren failed to alert them before a tornado destroyed 25 homes there.

The storms that pelted the Midwest weakened as they moved east Tuesday, but the National Weather Service said another wave was moving into Iowa, Illinois and Indiana.

Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle declared a state of emergency in Waukesha County, where emergency crews conducted a door-to-door search in Eagle after a warning siren failed to sound before a tornado hit Monday night. The 25 destroyed homes were among at least 125 damaged. One person was injured.

Eagle Fire Chief Justin Heim said all residents were accounted for Tuesday. Some, including Heim’s family, had to be pulled from the rubble. He said an investigation into why the siren failed was ongoing.

In Edna Mills, about 10 miles east of Lafayette, Ind., officials called for a voluntary evacuation as a small creek rushed over its banks, surrounding about three dozen homes and covering roads. School buses and boats were brought in to help residents who wanted to leave.

Heather St. Myer, her husband, Tom, and their seven children were among those who fled.

“We have been through it before, though we never had to be evacuated,” St. Myer told the Journal & Courier of Lafayette. “The kids didn’t want to leave.”

Farther south, water from a retention lake overflowed an earthen dam in Avon west of Indianapolis after two days of strong thunderstorms, said Jerry Bessler, a spokesman for the Washington Township/ Avon Fire Department.

Crews evacuated 32 homes, mostly downhill and downstream from the Indian Head Lake dam, along with 16 trailers in a nearby mobile-home park. Residents of all but five homes directly downstream from the dam were allowed to return Tuesday afternoon but were warned to be prepared to leave again if more storms hit later in the day, Bessler said.

Margie Burke, 61, said she woke up a little after 5 a.m., saw the hole in the dam and called her husband, John, who was at work.

“I was frightened. There was nothing I could do,” she said.

Crews were pumping the lake to try to lower water levels Tuesday. It had been four years since the dam was last inspected, said John Burke, president of the neighborhood homeowners’ association.

Indianapolis firefighters were called for three rescues on the city’s west side in an area where Little White Lick Creek and White Lick Creek converge, Fire Capt. Courtney Rice said.

They rescued a disabled man from a trailer; three others who became trapped after driving into high water in the area; and a man swam from his car as floodwaters started to sweep it away.

Witnesses in central Illinois reported tornadoes near the Indiana border, while flash floods covered roads in Pana, Fulton and Vermilion County. Tornadoes were spotted near Hoopeston and Rossville, and the American Red Cross said 26 families were forced out of their apartments after strong winds blew the roofs off several buildings in Beardstown.

Several other Indiana communities reported damage and street flooding from the storms, which carried winds of up to 60 mph. Trees were reported down in Lafayette and Crawfordsville. Numerous state highways and county roads were closed because of high water Tuesday morning in the Lafayette area. A mudslide blocked a rural road in Tippecanoe County.

Lightning may have sparked a fire that destroyed a shopping plaza in the northern Indianapolis suburb of Carmel early Tuesday, firefighters said. The fire gutted about 10 stores in the plaza, including a Blockbuster video store, a restaurant, a wine store and a tanning shop.

Information for this article was contributed by Tom Davies, Deanna Martin, Gretchen Ehlke, Nelson Lampe and David Mercer of The Associated Press.

Front Section, Pages 3 on 06/23/2010

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