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Central standard time. Click for Minneapolis, Minnesota Forecast

Minneapolis, Mn.

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Anchorage, Alaska.





Look what happen on St. Patrick's Day!

Look like Old Man Winter just like to playing with us in many away.. I'm not sure if was the cold weather that would freeze the ground, that bring on the problem below.

Winter will freeze up large water mains So why not bring on the same problems with a gas main.

And the on set of nice warm weather with a temperature of 53° for today.

Spring will try to kick Old Man Winter out the door on Sunday..

Now with the the story..


Large fire reported in south Minneapolis near Crosstown

A gas line rapture just off the freeway county road 62 and I-35W.

PAUL WALSH
Last update: March 17, 2011 - 9:44 AM
A huge natural gas fire is burning in Minneapolis near the Richfield border, sending flames shooting several stories high.

The blaze is near 60th Street and Nicollet Avenue, north of the Crosstown Highway and close to a Cub Foods store. xxxxx

Kristine Chapin, spokesperson for the Minnesota Department of Public Safety said that the explosion occurred near the Centerpoint maintenance facility just north of Highway 62.

It was a natural gas pipeline under 75 pounds of pressure, a trunk line serving that area of south Minneapolis. She could not say whether anyone had been injured. State safety engineers are on the scene, she said.

Twin Cities hospitals were put on alert after the explosion, but “we’ve been told there are no known injuries,” said Abbott Northwestern Hospital spokeswoman Gloria O’Connell. Any burn victims likely would be taken to Hennepin County Medical Center in downtown Minneapolis, but hospital personnel also have been told there have been no reported injuries, said spokeswoman Christine Hill.

CenterPoint Energy says it has people on the scene, as well as fire crews from Richfield and Minneapolis. The location of the ruptune and fire.

Motorists also said they could feel the heat from the fire as they drove by on the Crosstown.

Commuters report that Interstate 35W southbound was blocked near Diamond Lake Road, and other major traffic routes were backing up.

In Richfield, northbound traffic on 35W was being directed off at 66th Street, and eastbound motorists on Highway 62 were being forced to exit at Penn Avenue.

Mark Annett pulled over while driving on 35W and reported seeing flames in a drainage pond and trees and utility pole on fire. Annett said the logo on the front of the Cub appeared singed.

"You can feel the heat, and I am several blocks away," he said.

Annett said he felt an explosion about 8:40 a.m., prompting him to pull over and see what happened.

Star Tribune staff writers James Walsh, Josephine Marcotty and Warren Wolfe contributed to this report.

Paul Walsh • 612-673-4482

NOTE: This is a breaking news update. Check back for more details.

For now the fire is out and the other problem is that all the traffic is not moving on the Crosstown County road 62 and I 35W..


Breaking into Summer!

Minnesota weather had made the Memorial Day weekend has been wet. Rain all over the state... And the storms moving across that state and can place fear in the heart of everyone.

Look at the time of the alert... Where most would be in there beds a sleep...

~~~~~~~~~~///~~~~~~~~~~~~

Date: Sun, May 30, 2004, 2:49am (CDT+1)
Subject:WeatherMN - Hennepin County

~~~~~~~~~~///~~~~~~~~~~~~

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HAS ISSUED AN URBAN FLOOD ADVISORY FOR THE SEVEN COUNTY TWIN CITIES METROPOLITAN AREA UNTIL 430 AM.

THE ADVISORY INCLUDES THE COUNTIES OF.. HENNEPIN. RAMSEY. ANOKA. CARVER. DAKOTA. SCOTT & WASHINGTON.

HEAVY DOWNPOURS & THUNDERSTORMS WILL CREATE RAPID RUNOFF AND PONDING OF WATER OVERNIGHT. AT 130 AM.WEATHER RADAR ESTIMATED RAINFALL RATES NEAR 2 INCHES PER HOUR WITH SOME THE STRONGEST STORMS MOVING OVER THE TWIN CITIES. RAINFALL TOTALS BETWEEN 130 AM & 330 AM ARE LIKELY TO REACH 2 TO 3 INCHES.

THE HEAVIEST RAINS ARE EXPECTED TO PASS THROUGH THE AREA BY 3 AM. PERIODS OF SHOWERS & STORMS WILL CONTINUE HOWEVER THROUGH SUNRISE AND INTO MID MORNING. THOSE IN FLOOD PRONE AREAS SHOULD MONITOR THE WEATHER & LISTEN FOR LATER FORECASTS & STATEMENTS. DRAINAGE DITCHES. STORM SEWERS. BASEMENTS & LOW LYING AREAS SUCH AS UNDERPASSES ARE ESPECIALLY PRONE TO FLOODING.

STAY AWAY FROM AREAS EXPERIENCING RAPID RUNOFF. USE EXTRA CAUTION NEAR ROAD CONSTRUCTION AREAS. DO NOT ATTEMPT TO DRIVE THROUGH ROADS INUNDATED WITH WATER.OR DRIVE AROUND BARRICADES THAT HAVE BEEN PLACED TO CLOSE UNSAFE ROADS.

  Flood Warning

To the south the lower part of above photo show that more storms will be moving to the north.... More rain that we can use, but the western part of the state have a chance of more flooding...


No Power or teleaphone due to Tordnados in the Midwest.
Many cities and small towns are without power due to the storms that move around the Midwest.

Missing water tank were bounce along a weath flied.

Star_newsflag

MARENGO, Ind. -- Tornado-laden storms continued battering the Midwest on Sunday, destroying dozens of homes in this town and tearing the roof off an Indianapolis nursing home.

Several people were injured by the weekend's tornadoes, which killed an elderly man in Marengo and three people in Missouri and ripped through parts of Nebraska and Kansas. High wind was blamed for a fourth Missouri death and two in Kansas.

The storms destroyed at least 50 homes in Marengo, a town of 800 people about 35 miles northwest of Louisville, Ky., said Indiana State Police Sgt. Todd Ringle. The vast majority of the remaining homes and businesses were damaged, he said.

Patricia Parker found three mobile homes on top of each other when she arrived home. She did not think the residents were home at the time.

``My stomach's in knots,'' the 21-year-old said.

A Crawford County dispatcher saw three funnel clouds, one of which touched down, Ringle said. The area was bracing for another storm that was expected to hit later Sunday night.

The man killed in Marengo, whose name was not immediately released, died in his mobile home during the storm, Ringle said. Several other people were hurt, but none of the injuries was considered life-threatening.

After Howard Lincoln, 49, rode out the storm under his Bronco, he found his home still standing but knocked four feet off its foundation. In his front yard, a large piece of metal was wrapped around a tree.

``It's the worst thing I've ever been through. It was loud and noisy, windy. It was unreal,'' he said. ``I feel lucky, totally lucky. When you look up and see that thing on top of you, you don't know what to think.''

The National Weather Service in Indianapolis said it saw evidence of a tornado touchdown close to its office on the southwest side of the city. The worst of the storm passed south of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, but rain delayed the start of the Indianapolis 500 and forced a nearly two-hour interruption.

About 50 residents were in the Keystone Health Care Center when wind tore off the roof. They were removed from the Indianapolis nursing home, many wrapped in sheets and blankets, and were being examined to determine whether any needed to go to a hospital before being taken to another nursing home.

A tornado reported in Spencer, about 50 miles southwest of Indianapolis, sent trees and power lines crashing as it sent about 30 people scrambling to find cover in a gas station bathroom.

The twister ``jumped over our store and touched town on the road in front of us. I was freaking out,'' Billie Jo Roecker, assistant manager of the Speedway gas station, told The Indianapolis Star.

In the St. Louis suburb of Berkeley, strong winds snapped off part of a tree and dropped it onto a sport utility vehicle, killing the driver, Darren Clark, 39, of Ferguson, the Missouri State Highway Patrol said.

On Saturday night, a tornado hit northwest Missouri near the town of Weatherby, leveling a house and ripping a mobile home from its base.

Two women in the house and a man in the mobile home were killed, but two children a patrolman found tucked underneath the man survived, Daviess County Sheriff Kevin Heldenbrand said.

The children and two others from the women's home were taken to Children's Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, where three were listed in critical condition and one was in serious condition, hospital spokeswoman Jennifer Benz said.

In Kansas, high wind was blamed for two deaths in separate accidents Saturday on Interstate 70 in northwest Kansas, including that of state Sen. Stan Clark, R-Oakley. Clark was killed when his car was rear-ended by a tractor-trailer after the wind blew dust that cut visibility, the Kansas Highway Patrol said.

Sunday's storms knocked out power to more than 130,000 customers in Illinois and the St. Louis area. Flight delays were up to three hours Sunday evening at O'Hare International Airport and two hours at Midway Airport, and roughly 100 O'Hare flights were canceled, the Chicago Department of Aviation said.

Severe weather also swept through Nebraska, including at least two tornadoes in the southern part of the state. Two people jogging in Omaha on Saturday were seriously injured by a lightning strike, authorities said.

The storms knocked out electricity to thousands of customers in Nebraska and Oklahoma, but much of the power was restored by Sunday.

Tornadoes also were reported in Arkansas on Sunday, but there were no reports of injuries or major damage.

---

Associated Press writers Heather Hollingsworth in Weatherby, Mo., and Rick Callahan in Indianapolis contributed to this report.



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