Massive tornado outbreak ongoing on Michigan

Submitted by SanDiegoWolverine on May 7th, 2024 at 7:27 PM

There's currently a massive tornado outbreak ongoing in Michigan. There have been 12 tornado warnings in the last few hours including the state's first ever Tornado Emergency for Sherwood and Union City. This is part of a hugely destructive system that tore through the Great Plains yesterday. Although the chances of a tornado hitting your particular location are relatively slim this is a good time have a tornado emergency plan. The squall line is heading towards SE Michigan as we speak. 

If you want to track the ongoing outbreak I would recommend the following website: https://www.tornadohq.com/

Also follow the NWS tornado feed:

lawlright

May 7th, 2024 at 7:37 PM ^

Two tornados touched down in Portage. Hit a brand new FedEx warehouse building just south of I-94 on Portage Rd just north of Pfizer. Looked like half the building is gone, was expected 40-50 workers inside.

rob f

May 7th, 2024 at 8:59 PM ^

WWMT (TV 3 in Kalamazoo) reporting just 5 minutes ago that there's one FedEx worker still unaccounted for.  Otherwise only some minor injuries in that facility, which is very surprising when you see pics of the damage.

Maersk

May 7th, 2024 at 8:00 PM ^

Had a couple touchdown a mile or two south of me in portage, fortunately we didn’t take a direct hit. The FedEx distro center took a big hit😞

Solecismic

May 7th, 2024 at 8:02 PM ^

If you're interested in sleepless nights, I'd recommend the following site: https://www.spc.noaa.gov//

The National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center produces a very thorough report every few hours, with frequent updates during storms like these.

I've found they're particularly useful about 48 hours out. Longer than that, it's not very precise.

This time of year is always volatile. Gets cool enough with a passing front that the warmer air of our middle-America springs is often trapped. Seems like every 2-3 years there's a month like this, when every front produces severe weather. Really wet spring here in Ohio.

Wendyk5

May 7th, 2024 at 8:36 PM ^

The past couple of years, we've had terrible hail storms, with hail the size of baseballs. One storm was so bad that anyone who parked on the street was on the phone with their insurance companies the next day, trying to get all the dents and cracked windshields taken care of. And those suckers went horizontal and tore holes in the screens on our windows. We had to get them all rescreened. 

LB

May 7th, 2024 at 8:15 PM ^

Tornados are malevolent. I spent part of my formative years in central and south central Oklahoma. Stay safe out there.

Wendyk5

May 7th, 2024 at 8:33 PM ^

It passed through the Chicagoland area, too. Not sure if it did any damage, but we had a tornado watch for a couple of hours. Stay safe everyone! 

monkeybiz

May 7th, 2024 at 10:00 PM ^

Impact on Chicago appears to be minimal so far. Was watching the radar earlier and most of the storms had a horizontal path through the area as opposed to a vertical "wall" that swept through this morning. Tornado warnings east of my office in NWI this afternoon while the sun was shining where I was. Storm coming through western burbs as I type this so we'll see. Tom Skilling just gave me a lightning warning on my phone so there's that.

drjaws

May 7th, 2024 at 8:55 PM ^

Nephew lives in Portage and his apartment building has a tree on it.

No deaths have been reported, and I pray it stays that way, but a ton of damage done. Trailer park was trashed according to drone video on the news. At least two tornadoes touched down in Portage and one near Galesburg / West Battle Creek. Another near Colon. Probably others in SW Michigan.

Stay safe y’all 

nerv

May 7th, 2024 at 9:10 PM ^

If school has taught me anything its that all you need to protect yourself during a tornado is to hold a text book over your head. Boom, danger averted. 

LB

May 7th, 2024 at 11:40 PM ^

We did not get under our desks. We ducked and covered in the hallways. I went to school with kids whose dads were B-52 aircrew during the height of the cold war. We knew enough to know it wouldn't matter. They also used us as test subjects for sonic booms. That was exciting.

NittanyFan

May 7th, 2024 at 10:26 PM ^

I was reading a severe weather message board* this morning ------ yes such things exist ----- and a poster there said today's setup looked A LOT like May 13, 1980.  Which is when Kalamazoo got hit by an F3 tornado.

https://stormtrack.org/threads/2024-05-07-event-in-oh-mi-il-ky.32715/

That dude absolutely nailed it with his forecast and the historical analogy.

You don't get higher-end events in Michigan often, only about once a decade.  But they can occur.  The Grand Rapids and Flint metros have both been hit by F5 tornadoes in the past.

----

*my undergrad degree is in Meteorology, though I don't do anything Meteorology-related at all professionally.  Thus the interest.

tybert

May 8th, 2024 at 10:44 AM ^

I was living in Detroit area and in HS when this 1980 tornado hit K-zoo. I remember all the news stories that night about the tragedy. The warning systems back then were often so late that you may be caught in the open. Glad to hear (so far) no serious injuries. 

samsoccer7

May 7th, 2024 at 10:29 PM ^

My parents’ neighborhood and the one I grew up in, in Portage, got wrecked. Still collecting info on Facebook on friends and families still there. My parents weren’t home and their house is ok.

Grampy

May 7th, 2024 at 10:47 PM ^

 Calls to mind the tornado that buzz cut Dexter about a decade ago. Sky south of us turned green, and you were thankful that’s as close as it got (in our case, about 3 miles). If you know where to look, you can still see where a swath was cut through woods. 

Cruzcontrol75

May 8th, 2024 at 12:57 AM ^

read earlier that yesterday was the first ever NWS declared tornado emergency in MI.  4 tornadoes were confirmed in the state.   Weather Channel was calling the Portage tornado a likely EF-2.  today is going to be a potentially rough day for OH, KY, IN, IL, TN, MO & AR in what has been a wild week of storms and tornadoes.  for anyone traveling through those states, stay safe. 

UMBSnMBA

May 8th, 2024 at 8:33 AM ^

Anybody remember the big tornado that went through downtown Kazoo in 1980?  Tore up all the trees in Bronson Park.  That was pretty exciting.

LSAClassOf2000

May 8th, 2024 at 8:58 AM ^

The infamous "Green Storm" in the Detroit area was July of that year. Some areas around Ann Arbor and through the downriver suburbs of Detroit experienced 100+ MPH gusts from the derecho and an unfortunate many were without electricity for a week in some cases.

For years, the stump of the willow tree that we lost that day remained in the backyard, mainly as a natural sitting area of sorts. 

tybert

May 8th, 2024 at 10:49 AM ^

My sister was working downtown at the RenCen back then. The Republican convention was also going on in Detroit. It was a vicious storm called a derecho. I was in HS and working that morning, during clean-up and pool work at a swim club in Livonia. She had to evacuate to one of the lower floor interior rooms at the RenCen. I remember going into the basement of the swim club freaking out (I was the only one there). Straight line winds hit almost 100 mph. One I'll never forget.