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Storms Bring Damage In Wide Swaths of South

Some of the areas affected were hit by tornadoes in December
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Jan 2, 2022 6:00 PM CST
Storms Bring Damage In Wide Swaths of South
Storm debris sits on the roof top of Hobby Lobby off Scottsville Road in Bowling Green, Ky., after another tornado warning was issued late Saturday morning for Warren and surrounding counties, following the devastating tornadoes that tore through town on Dec. 11, 2021.   (Grace Ramey/Daily News via AP)

A line of severe storms damaged homes, knocked out power and downed trees in parts of the southern United States late Saturday into Sunday morning. Authorities closed roads in Hazel Green, Alabama, after power lines came down and homes suffered damage, the AP reports. The Madison County Sheriff's Office shared photos online including one of a snapped power pole. The weather also caused damage to businesses in Hazel Green, including a Walmart, local news outlets reported. The community is located about 15 miles north of Huntsville. Huntsville Utilities said service has been restored to parts of Hazel Green, but work continues with multiple downed power poles in the area.

The same system brought down trees in the nearby town of Triana, roughly 20 miles (32 kilometers) southwest of Huntsville. Mayor Mary Caudle told WAFF-TV that about 280 residents took cover in a storm shelter Saturday night. Madison, Morgan Cullman, Marshall, Jackson, DeKalb, Limestone, Franklin and Lawrence counties remain under a tornado watch until 2am. The National Weather Service issued a winter weather advisory for north and parts of north-central Alabama, in effect from 6pm. through 3am. Monday. Temperatures are expected to plummet as a cold front moves through.

The storms followed a system earlier Saturday which brought flooding to parts of Kentucky. Gov. Andy Beshear said Sunday that four tornadoes were confirmed. No injuries were reported. The strongest was an EF-2 tornado that caused significant damage in Hopkinsville on Saturday with estimated peak winds of 115 mph, the National Weather Service said. Temperatures dipped Sunday after the severe weather rolled through, and winter storm warnings were posted from northern Alabama to southern New Jersey with up to 7 inches of snow possible in some areas. Freeze warnings were posted from southern Texas to Mississippi. (More storm stories.)

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