As I do not have any experience with tornadoes and live in the NE where it's not quite so common, can someone explain to me why they lock the doors?I understand that might help them from flying open but does it make that much of a difference during a tornado when, I'm sure, those locks are useless, particulary when the roof can be ripped off the building? And wouldn't that be putting others who might be in the parking lot in danger if they are trying to seek shelter in the store?
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If he had walked across the parking lot two minutes prior and driven home he would not have faced any danger. Instead, he died inside the building.
As I do not have any experience with tornadoes and live in the NE where it's not quite so common, can someone explain to me why they lock the doors?I understand that might help them from flying open but does it make that much of a difference during a tornado when, I'm sure, those locks are useless, particulary when the roof can be ripped off the building? And wouldn't that be putting others who might be in the parking lot in danger if they are trying to seek shelter in the store?
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I can only image if he had left. The family would have probably sued as well. Saying, why would they let him go out in such danger conditions.
my best friend and I were 17 and at a mall when a tornado was comming. It was one of those open air malls and they directed us all into a concrete hallway. They told us that we wernt allowed to leave because it wasnt safe. they locked us all in. there were 35 people in a tiny hallway. All the doors to the stores were locked and so was the door to the hallway we were stuck in. They also had a mall security gaurd posted at each end. Im guessing its just common to lock people in.
You have absolutely no way of knowing that! He could have driven right into the tornado.
Once the sirens go off that means a tornado HAS been spotted, there is a tornado.
To me it depends on where their shelter was.
The worst place to be is in a large, open space with tons of debris flying around (like the main open space in a Wal-Mart).
For the record, I got this information from emergency management when we were choosing a shelter for our day care center. We were told absolutely NOT the dining hall, even though it was 3/4 below grade and had a full story above it. He directed us to the bathrooms which were above grade, but small, windowless and had concrete block walls. He said tornado statistics show that large, open rooms with plenty of debris are very dangerous places to take shelter.
They set them off as long in advance of a possible weather event as possible, as waiting until an actual tornado is spotted means it's too late for those in the path. Back in the day, they'd have to see the tornado to set them off because radar couldn't pick them up, but modern doppler radars can predict them well before they drop and so they give far more notice when they can.
No one can truly predict which storms will drop tornadoes, but there are signs of which ones can drop a tornado. Some cities have a heavy finger when it comes to sounding the sirens that many people think they're crying wolf. People that live in the region think they know it all and don't heed the warning.
If there was already an advisory out for severe weather, the guy should've parked his butt in his house and taken shelter if it was such a better place to be. Walmart didn't put his life in jeopardy, he put his own life in jeopardy.
http://www.usatoday.com/weather/storms/tornadoes/story/2012-04-02/new-tornado-warnings/53946346/1
where I live they do not set the sirens off unless a tornado has been spotted by a spotter. If they set the sirens off for a watch or high winds they would be going off constantly.
Enough people don't pay attention to them as it is, if they set them off for anything less than an actual tornado no one would.
I live in the mid-west and we have sirens go off several times a year during severe weather and we have never had a tornado hit our area. I no longer pay attention to them. They come on, last 5-10 minutes and go back off. I've often wondered how I would really know if there was an actual tornado coming!
nchulka said:I live in the mid-west and we have sirens go off several times a year during severe weather and we have never had a tornado hit our area. I no longer pay attention to them. They come on, last 5-10 minutes and go back off. I've often wondered how I would really know if there was an actual tornado coming!