Rescue crews and local law enforcement still have portions of tornado-ravaged Picher, Okla., cordoned off due to power lines and debris as others sift through the significant damage caused by strong storms on Saturday night.
Oklahoma Gov. Brad Henry toured the northwest Oklahoma town on Sunday afternoon and said the damage was unlike anything he had seen.
“It is about the worst that I have seen,” Henry said. “The one in Oklahoma City (1999) was bad, but this here is one of the worst.”
In Missouri, crews continued to search a 12-mile-long path of damage caused by a tornado that killed 15 total. Of those 14, 13 were reportedly killed in Newton County, along with one in Jasper County and another in Barry County. The Missouri tornado, according to Newton County officials, stayed on the ground for about 12 miles.
Initial estimates from Newton County were that 50 homes were damaged or destroyed due to the storm.
As of Sunday afternoon in Picher, there were six confirmed dead with one that was unconfirmed after a tornado that the National Weather Service in Tulsa, Okla., officially rated as an EF4 tornado. An EF4 tornado has winds between 166 mph and 200 mph.
Since the Enhanced Fujita Scale was introduced in Feb. 2007, the only tornado listed as an EF5 was the Greensburg tornado.
Maj. Gen. Bud Wyatt, adjutant general of the Oklahoma Air and Army National Guard, said there were at least two still missing.
“Those are the only ones that the Emergency Management knows about and there may be others that they are unaware of,” Wyatt said.
The section of Picher that remains closed to traffic is in the southwest corner of the town and officials say it is where the worst of the damage is located.
“We are making sure that the only people coming in are property owners with legitimate business there,” Wyatt said.
Officials were not sure when that section would be re-opened to regular traffic.
“It is their town to make sure that the health and safety risks are taken care of,” said Oklahoma State Director of Emergency Management Albert Ashwood. “I am sure that they know people need to get back in and sort through the things that they might have left.”
As Henry toured the damaged areas in the southeast section of Picher, he told residents that the state is continuing to work to make sure that assistance continues to flow into the town with a population of 800.