On Friday night, at least 14 people were killed in Oklahoma in tornadoes and flooding. Another half dozen people are still missing.
The night of the storm, the Oklahoman posted a report from the city of Moore, where 24 people were killed last month, including seven kids at an elementary school with no safe rooms for them to take shelter in during a storm.
The report noted that researchers into extreme weather had finished their survey of safe rooms in Moore, and the safe rooms had worked, even in that EF5 tornado:
[Larry]Tanner said researchers found 16 aboveground safe rooms or storm shelters in the damage path or near the damage path of the storm. All survived.
“They all performed great,” Tanner said. “We continue to have great success stories both in Joplin and in Oklahoma City.”
In some cases, all that was left after the tornado passed were the shelters. Tanner said aboveground shelters have had a hard time catching on in Oklahoma, where people have been told for decades that the safest place during a tornado is underground.
During Friday night’s storm, students at the Canadian Valley Technology Center in El Reno, Oklahoma, took shelter in an underground classroom as a tornado destroyed their school. They all lived. From the New York Times:
Mr. Winters, the superintendent of the three-campus technology center, said he would not build another school without shelters, underground or aboveground, or safe rooms. “If it was a full school day, 500, 600 people in the building at that time, that hallway would have been used,” he said. “We’re going to build a new building. Why don’t we build one that’s got multiple safe rooms? Why don’t we build one that we can safely put 500 people in at one time? When you see the devastation and you see the end result, it clears up for you pretty quick.”
If the need for a storm shelter gets clear after you survive a storm thanks to having one, the question of how to pay for it remains. Governor Mary Fallin says she wants to have “a very vigorous discussion as to what can we do within budgetary means,” which depends at least partly on government having the will to spend more.









