PoliteSuccubus
Spinster Aunt of Lit
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2002
- Posts
- 8,093
Did you know that if you have cement blocks on your roof to keep it from blowing off the insureance company will not pay for damages?
I live in Anchorage, and we had a wild ride here.
I live in Anchorage, and we had a wild ride here.
ANCHORAGE (March 13, 6:15 p.m. AST) - Winds gusting to 109 mph at the control tower closed Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport for nine hours, and caused damage and at least two injuries Thursday in Southcentral Alaska.
Two Mat-Su residents were hospitalized in critical condition after being struck by a falling Chevron sign and a collapsed barn, according to Palmer Police Chief George Boatright.
One was a volunteer firefighter on the way to a call about 11 a.m. Thursday, Boatright said. As the victim and another firefighter were preparing to turn north on the Glenn Highway, a service station sign came crashing down on their truck.
Another victim was hurt when a barn collapsed north of Palmer, Boatright said. He didn't identify either victim.
At the Anchorage airport, operations were halted at 11:30 p.m. Wednesday after the control tower was evacuated due to high winds, according to Corky Caldwell, the airport's deputy director.
About 15 flights were diverted to Fairbanks and thousands of passengers had to wait for later flights.
"We had several thousand people to get out of here in a timely fashion. It was very challenging with the extreme conditions we had," Caldwell said.
"Large sections of the roof (of one terminal) were torn up or otherwise damaged," he said. That caused problems with broken water pipes and the heating system.
Debris scattered on the runways had to be cleaned up before the airport was reopened at 9 a.m. The airport alone had about half a million dollars in damage, Caldwell said.
Nearby, the Postal Service's airport facility had roof problems, and the downtown post office was also damaged. Both were closed Thursday.
At nearby Lake Hood, more than two dozen airplanes were overturned or twisted by the high winds, and several planes at Merrill Field in Anchorage were damaged as well.
The unusual storm swept down off the mountains, bringing unusually frigid air, said Dave Vonderheide of the National Weather Service in Anchorage.
"This type of storm happens every 20 years, 30 years," he said.
The high wind at the top of the 150-foot control tower wasn't duplicated closer to the ground. Ground-level gusts at the airport topped out at 67 mph, according to Vonderheide, though gusts of more than 70 mph were recorded elsewhere in the city.
The really big winds at ground level were in the Matanuska-Susitna Valley, where a gust of 99 mph was recorded at a fire station that also serves as an emergency operations center halfway between Palmer and Wasilla.
That station was evacuated after the winds damaged the roof and a generator failed. Gusts to 75 mph were recorded there late Thursday afternoon, after workers were moved out, and another surge was expected Thursday night, Vonderheide said.
A wind-fed fire near the Alaska State Fair grounds closed the Glenn Highway for several hours. The road was reopened early Thursday morning, but firefighters were still mopping up Thursday afternoon, said Palmer Police Chief Boatright. Several outbuildings were destroyed by that fire.
Electric service was interrupted to thousands of residents in Anchorage and the Mat-Su area, with as many as 6,000 Chugach Electric Association customers without power at one time, according to Patti Bogan of Chugach.
In the Mat-Su, about 2,000 homes and businesses were without power Thursday afternoon as crews fixed one line only to have a tree branch knock out another somewhere else, said Bruce Scott of Matanuska Electric Association.
In Mat-Su and Anchorage, roadsides were littered with branches and twigs, plastic sleds and five-gallon buckets. Plastic garbage bags fluttered from trees and brush across the region.
Schools in the Mat-Su Borough were closed on Thursday, and officials said there would be no school Friday either.
