Community Corner

St. Charles County Paramedics Travel to Joplin to Help Tornado Victims

Medics are part of regional strike team.

Just one month after twisters flattened St. Louis County homes and businesses, Mother Nature's wrath struck Missouri with what is being called the one of the most deadly tornadoes in state history.

Sunday night a tornado ripped through the town of Joplin, where 89 people died and hundreds injured, about 310 miles from St. Louis in Southwest Missouri. The number of deaths are expected to increase as emergency responders sift through the rubble.

The tornado hit St. John’s Regional Medical Center in Joplin and caused significant destruction throughout the area.

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“We don’t know whether the Joplin tornado will be the worst in Missouri history,” said Ben Miller, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service’s (NWS) St. Louis Office. “It’s too early to say because we don’t have all the information yet.”

Gov. Jay Nixon declared a state of emergency in Joplin and deployed the National Guard. Missouri’s State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) is coordinating state and local responders through regional mutual aid agreements and requests filed with the agency.

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Martin Limpert, spokesman for St. Charles County Ambulance District, said three St. Charles County paramedics headed to Joplin as part of regional strike team on Monday. Paramedics Jeremey Hollrah and Scott Mueller went with an ambulance and supervisor Brian Schnelle went as a strike team leader. 

Limpert said the paramedics and fire fighters from the St. Louis area will be there to help relieve some of the Joplin-area rescuers. 

Although much of the initial search and recovery will have been done, other emergencies will happen during the clean up, he said. 

"Probably things like chest pain," he said. "Sleep deprivation issues. There are responders out there who are worried about their families." 

He said many area medics have felt the urge to self-deploy and head down to Joplin to be of help.  For now, those volunteers have been advised to wait until there's a call for more assistance so it can be sent in an organized manner. 

It’s been a busy severe weather year for the St. Louis area.

On April 22, tornadoes hit , Maryland Heights, Bridgeton and other North St. Louis counties, forced Lambert St. Louis International Airport to close and caused significant damage to the surrounding region. No one died in that tornado.

On New Year’s Eve, a tornado swept through Sunset Hills and Fenton caused major damage to area homes, businesses and churches. A Fenton resident died of injuries she received during that tornado after winds lifted her car off the ground and threw it into a concrete median in Fenton.

NWS meteorologist Ben Miller said Missouri's tornado season is from March through June.

“But we can and do have tornadoes at other times of the year like we did on New Year’s Eve, and storms typically tend to be a lot stronger during the colder months,” he said.

Pat Guinan, a climatologist at the University of Missouri Extension’s Commercial Agriculture Program, said Missouri averages 32 tornadoes a year.

He said the state’s deadliest tornado occurred in St. Louis on May 27, 1896 when 137 people were killed and 800 injured.

Listed below are Missouri tornado statistics for the last five years from the National Weather Service.

2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 Total MO Tornadoes 65 45 93 42 102 32 Deaths    4* 3 19 3 13 1 Injuries 19 11 232 3 273 7

* There was one death that occured in 2011 from the New Year's Eve tornado that hit Fenton in 2010.


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