Tag Archives: Severe Weather

FEMA responds to deadly Kentucky tornadoes amid layoffs, looming cuts

As potentially severe storms threaten parts of the Midwest and the South — which comes after a string of tornadoes have already left over two dozen dead — residents will likely have to turn to a weakened Federal Emergency Management Agency to aid recovery.

In London, Kentucky, Michael Carnes clung to his family as they heard the walls crumbling around them when a tornado hit on Friday.

“We ran into the closet under the stairs, which we thought was the safest place, which it was cuz it’s basically the only place it wasn’t damaged at all,” he recalled.

Across the state, authorities said 19 people were killed after a tornado damaged hundreds of homes and tossed vehicles in the air. With multiple other residents hospitalized, the death toll was expected to rise.

Extreme weather has caused widespread destruction in the Bluegrass State. In April, heavy rainfall led to major flooding in what is now Kentucky’s wettest year on record. And so far in 2025, more than 42 tornadoes have been reported. 

A tornado hit London, Kentucky, on Friday, May 16, 2025.

CBS News


Carnes and other survivors are picking up the pieces of what’s left, and they’re going to need a lot of help.

London Police and Laurel County officials have set up sites for residents to pick up supplies and several shelters have been opened. FEMA is also on the ground, officials tell CBS News, but the agency is facing its own challenges after it lost about a third of its staff. About 1,800 employees took the Trump administration’s buyout offer, a top former FEMA official told CBS News. Another 200 or so probationary workers were also fired.

Earlier this month, the head of FEMA was fired after he appeared to publicly break with the Trump administration on whether to eliminate the nation’s disaster relief agency. Cameron Hamilton, FEMA’s acting administrator, departed roughly three weeks before the start of the Atlantic hurricane season.

Last week, CBS News reported on an internal FEMA review that said the disaster relief agency is “not ready” for the hurricane season, which officially begins in June.

Meanwhile, Congress is reviewing the Trump administration’s proposal to slash FEMA’s budget, nixing $646 million in non-disaster grants during the 2026 fiscal year.

President Trump has toyed with the idea of eliminating FEMA and in March signed an executive order directing state and local governments to “play a more active and significant role” in preparing for emergencies. The administration has also justified the proposed cuts to the agency and hiring overhaul as “cutting out wasteful spending and bureaucracy.”

Despite the layoffs and potential cuts, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said leaders at FEMA have vowed to help.

“The people who’ve been harmed are gonna get our very best. We’re gonna fight for them,” Beshear said Saturday. “I have no criticisms of their operations on the ground and that’s coming from a guy who’s had disagreements with this president, but they’ve done a good job when FEMA has come into Kentucky and I’m grateful.”

For now, Carnes and his neighbors say they feel overwhelmed. When asked what is next for him to do, Carnes said he’ll probably file for relief with the Red Cross and FEMA.

“And just try to get as much help as we can to rebuild,” Carnes said, “or move on.”



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Flooding in western Maryland, Virginia and Pennsylvania leaves boy missing, schools and homes swamped

Flash floods sparked by heavy rain hit parts of Virginia, western Maryland and Pennsylvania on Tuesday, leaving a 12-year-old boy missing in Virginia and forcing elementary schools in rural Maryland to evacuate, authorities said.

Severe flooding has left parts of Meyersdale Borough in Somerset County underwater after heavy rains pounded the area on Tuesday.

In a message posted Tuesday night on social media, the Albemarle County Fire Rescue service in Virginia said county police had received a call late in the afternoon about a boy being swept away by a flood-swollen creek. The fire department said search efforts had to be put on hold after about three hours, “due to limited visibility in the overnight hours and the safety of all those involved.”

The fire and rescue service said the search would resume on Wednesday, and it warned residents not to “self-deploy” in attempt to find the missing child as conditions remained dangerous.

Another elementary school in the region was also evacuated, and students at a middle school were told to shelter in place for a while on Tuesday, according to the Allegany County Department of Emergency Services.

Homes flooded in southern Pennsylvania

Residents in low-lying areas of Meyersdale, near the Maryland border in Pennsylvania’s Somerset County, were ordered to evacuate Tuesday as the Casselman River rose precipitously.

“We are seeing flooding in the majority of the houses in town,” Meyersdale Mayor Shane Smith said, according to KDKA, CBS Pittsburgh. “Some even as high as the first floor. Roads throughout the area are being destroyed by the fast-moving water… This is some of the most severe flooding we’ve ever seen.”



Severe flooding leaves Pennsylvania borough underwater

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Smith declared a state of emergency for Meyersdale. He said there were no reported injuries, and that both federal and state emergency management personnel were expected in the town on Wednesday to help coordinate the response.

There were also reports of flood and storm related road closures and some damage in Bedford and Campbell Counties in Virginia, and a hospital being partially flooded in eastern Tennessee, near the Virginia state line. Authorities said two women had to be rescued from an inundated vehicle on a washed out road in Bedford

Rural western Maryland schools forced to evacuate

About 100 miles north, in the far western corner of Maryland, the North Branch Potomac River and some tributaries burst their banks on Tuesday, forcing the evacuation of schools and businesses.

An aerial photo shows the flooded downtown area of Westernport, Maryland, May 13, 2025.

Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post/Getty


According to KDKA, about 150 students and 50 adults had to be evacuated from the Westernport Elementary School. The floodwaters rose so quickly and entered the building that brothers William and Quinton Wade were left trapped inside with dozens of others.

“Whenever we were going down to get in the boat, the first floor was flooded,” Quinton, a second-grader at the school, told KDKA.

“The first floor had been flooded all the way to the ceiling,” added William, who is in fourth grade.

“I didn’t get any call from the school. I didn’t know any plan. I didn’t know anything. So, my instinct was, get my kids,” the boys’ mother Alley Wade told KDKA. She said she rushed from her job to the school, but found the water too high for her to do anything, so she waited while the rescuers in boats saved her kids and dozens of others. 

Alley Wade said she had never seen such severe flooding in their town.

“I have never. Now, I believe there was a bad flood in 1996, but I was 4,” she said.

Officials said about 150 students and 50 adults had to be evacuated from the flooded Westernport Elementary School in western Maryland, May 13, 2025.

Handout


While the Wades’ home was unscathed, some homes and businesses in Westernport were inundated Tuesday after hours of heavy rain.

In a statement released in the early Wednesday morning hours, Maryland Governor Wes Moore urged people in the affected region to “remain vigilant, heed warnings from local officials, and prioritize safety during this time,” adding: “If you don’t have to go out, please do not go out. Stay off the roads if possible and heed any evacuation orders.”

According to the governor’s office, parts of Allegany County had already seen at least 4.65 inches of rain in 24 hours, and more rain was expected into Wednesday morning.

The statement said the North Branch Potomac River in Cumberland was expected to peak at 22.6 feet Tuesday night into Wednesday morning, “which would mark the highest river crest since 1996.” 

“We remain in close contact with local officials and continue to coordinate resources as the rain continues to fall,” Moore said in the statement.

The flooding comes on the heels of a new study by the climate science group World Weather Attribution, published this week, that found deadly storms that tore through eight U.S. states in the Midwest and South in the first week of April, killing at least 24 people, were made significantly worse by human-caused climate change

The group said its analysis showed that human-caused global warming made the record-breaking downpours about 9% heavier than they would otherwise have been.

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