For many residents of Moore, Okla., Monday’s devastating tornado was an unwelcome bit of déjà vu: in 1999, another deadly twister slammed the city, killing 36 people and injuring 583 others.
Fourteen years ago, the Bridge Creek/Moore tornado was one of only six tornadoes in U.S. history to cause more than $1 million in damage, impacting more than 8,000 homes and ultimately costing $1.4 billion to clean up.
Former Sen. Don Nickles, R-Okla., who represented the Sooner State from 1981 until his retirement in 2005, and Politico reporter Lois Romano, who was a correspondent in Tulsa for a decade, were there for that deadly storm more than a dozen years ago, and said on Tuesday’s The Daily Rundown that the current devastation in Moore could be similarly costly.
“I’ve been and seen, witnessed the recoveries of a lot of tornadoes, but the one in [1999] in Moore stands out, because it was so devastating,” said Nickles. “Frankly, we were so lucky in 1999. It was a devastating tornado, just missed a high school…and no one was killed, I don’t think, in the high school. It could have killed hundreds, so we were very fortunate. But it was devastating. And this just looks just like it.








