Responders Investigating Possible Tornado Touchdown around 4:30 AM in Palm Coast’s B Section

Responders Investigating Possible Tornado Touchdown around 4:30 AM in Palm Coast’s B Section
The scene on Barrington Drive in Palm Coast’s B Section this morning (Palm Coast Fire Department)

Last Updated: 9:21 a.m.

Note: if you have images of damage or damage reports, please text 386/503-3190.

A tornado touched down in Palm Coast’s B-Section at 4:45 this morning, cutting a west-east swath from the area of Belle Terre Parkway at One Lakes Parkway to I-95, causing severe damage to homes along the way and making several homes inhabitable, authorities said this morning.

“We definitely had a tornado touchdown in the Indian trails neighborhood this morning, around 4:45,” Palm Coast Fire Chief Kyle Berryhill said. “We will have a better idea of the total damage when we get a little bit better weather and daylight and all those kinds of things. But we know for sure that we’ve sustained multiple, severely damaged homes, but so far we’ve encountered no injuries. Fire crews, sheriff’s deputies, [firefighters] from both fire departments, Flagler County Fire Rescue and Palm Coast are in the area right now.”

The tornado touched down around 4:45 this morning, leaving a trail of downed trees, downed power lines, damaged roofs, fencing and power losses. There are no reports of injuries.

“I have reports of roof trusses into the ground like they were thrown to the ground like javelins, like multiple down the street from here, so definitely on the ground in this area,” Berryhill said, speaking at the command center authorities established with the Sheriff’s Office’s moble command at Indian Trails Sports Complex.

A roofless house in Palm Coast's B Section, damaged by this morning's tornado. (FCSO)
A roofless house in Palm Coast’s B Section, damaged by this morning’s tornado. (FCSO)

Reflecting the instability of the morning, Berryhill asked a reporter, Sheriff Rick Staly and sheriff’s and city spokespersons to retreat to a Little League equipment building just before the interviews, as the area was again under a tornado warning.

At least two houses were known to have had their roofs blown off, making them inhabitable.

“Flagler County Emergency Management has set up at the Parkview church here on Belle Terre so both the church and county EM are there to help folks get to get some shelter for today if they don’t have appropriate shelter right now,” the fire chief said. Parview is at 5435 Belle Terre Parkway. (As of 9:30, one family was already receiving assistance there.)

Several roads branching off of Belle Terre Parkway were restricted to local traffic, with traffic allowed out but not in.

“We held over our night shift so we would make sure we had enough staff because we change shifts at 6 a.m.,” Sheriff Rick Staly, who was at gthe command center, said. “Right now, we’re not seeing the issues that we saw during the Starlight tornado but we won’t tolerate any of that. That’s why we have extra people out in these areas.”

Flagler County Sheriff Rick Staly at the mobile command center set up at Indian Trails Sports Complex, where all responders' commands were operating this morning. (© FlaglerLive)
Flagler County Sheriff Rick Staly at the mobile command center set up at Indian Trails Sports Complex, where all responders’ commands were operating this morning. (© FlaglerLive)

Staly was referring to the December 19, 2013 tornado that tore through Palm Coast’s B, F and C Sections, demolishing numerous homes but also not injuring anyone. Deputies at the time patrolled neighborhoods to prevent looting of emptied homes, and to reduce the number of gawkers in scenes still strewn with potentially live wires and hazardous obstructions.

“And so you’re going to see patrols throughout,” Staly said. “The fire department and emergency management will do most of the cleanup throughout, the day. But we are here to assist them and make sure that there are aren’t any issues. Also with our fire department, because it was so dark out, we were going door to door to make sure everybody was okay.”

Damage has been reported in the area of Indian Trails–Birchwood Drive, Birchview Place, Barley Lane, Barrington Drive–with some 500 customers losing power initially, according to Florida Power and Light, though nearer to 8:30 a.m., that number was cut to 100. Crews were assessing the damage but darkness was making the job challenging.

“We also have some trees down on the western side of the county that could have been the initiation of the storm as it was heading heading that way, kind of in the 100, 75 and 302 area in Bunnell,” Jonathan Lord, the county’s emergency management director, said, referring to state and county roads.

“We do not have reports of structural damage there yet,” Lord said. The tornado in the western part of the county may not have touched down, or if it did, it may have skipped and bounced.

Lord had been in the field with the Sheriff’s Office, the Palm Coast Fire Department and Flagler County Fire Rescue, along with FPL and Palm Coast Public Works crews, some of which were clearing roads of tree limbs. “It’s hard to see it right now, obviously daylight is when we can really see, but we don’t know of any injuries at this point in time.” But, he said, “we’ve definitely had some structures impacted. Definitely lots of wires down, trees down.”

Damaged fencing along Belle Terre Parkway near Pine Lakes Parkway this morning. (© Dexter Alejandro for FlaglerLive)
Damaged fencing along Belle Terre Parkway near Pine Lakes Parkway this morning. (© Dexter Alejandro for FlaglerLive)

Describing what he saw before sunrise, he said, “there’s definitely trees on wires on everywhere. A lot of water due to the heavy rain but that’s probably all over Flagler County, as well as definitely some damage to a few homes, to roofs and things like that.”

Staly again warned against gawkers traveling to the affected zones. “We know from FPL there’s a little over 100 homes without power and so we want to assist those people,” Stalky said, “but we don’t need people right now coming into the area to gawk and look, power lines are down some trees are down. And so while it’s not likely that these lines are live, they could be, so for their safety, we don’t want people coming in right now. Of course daylight coming out now makes it a little easier to control egress into these areas.”

There was no tornado warning locally, Lord confirmed. There was one for northern Volusia County. “I don’t know what it was but it sure sounded like a tornado,” Darla Pantaleone wrote on FlaglerWeatherInfo.

The city was drenched by a severe storm and whipped by strong winds in pre-dawn hours, part of a weather system that spawned confirmed tornadoes on the western part of the state around Clearwater and that moved rapidly from west to east. The National Weather Service was reporting possible touchdowns in the Clearwater Beach and Crystal River areas.

No homes were impacted on the western side of Flagler County.

The National Weather Service will determine whether in fact a tornado did touch down. “That will take over a day maybe two days,” Lord said, “they have to come out, they have to look at the incident scene, they have to look at the debris pattern, then they look at their radar signatures and all that stuff. So that’s not something that we’ll know right away. And luckily, that doesn’t really impact the response. That’s kind of an after the fact.”

Debris in Palm Coast’s B-Section. (FCSO)

A tornado warning remained in effect for west0central Flagler County and southeastern Putnam until 7:15 a.m., according to the National Weather Service in Jacksonville. A severe thunderstorm capable of producing a tornado was located over Fruitland, or near Pomona Park, on the western side of Crescent Lake, moving northeast at 45 mph. The storm was expected to reach Andalusia in western Flagler County at 7 a.m.

At 7:04 a.m., the weather service reported that doppler radar was tracking gusty showers capable of producing a landspout over Andalusia, moving northeast at 45 mph.

A tornado watch was in effect for all of Flagler County until 9 a.m. and a flood advisory was in effect until 8:30 a.m. The weather service was forecasting continued thunderstorms with gusty winds and heavy rainfall this morning, with southwest winds 15 to 20 mph with gusts up to 35 mph.

A school district spokesperson said buses are running their normal schedule this morning.

[This is a developing story.]

possible toirnado palm coast
The city was drenched by a severe storm and whipped by strong winds in pre-dawn hours, part of a weather system that spawned confirmed tornadoes on the western part of the state around Clearwater and that moved rapidly from west to east.
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