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Tornado sweeps through North Dakota town, leaving at least 3 dead

Kids cool off in the mist from a fountain
Mist from a fountain provides relief as the temperature approached 100 degrees in Kansas City, Mo., on Friday. Nearly 150 million Americans were under a heat advisory or warning.
(Charlie Riedel / Associated Press)

Powerful winds — including a tornado — that swept across parts of the upper Midwest left three people dead and a regional airport heavily damaged, while nearly 150 million Americans were under a heat advisory or warning.

A complex storm system wreaked havoc in parts of North Dakota, northern Minnesota and northern Wisconsin, with reported tornadic activity, large hail and strong wind gusts, according to Brian Hurley, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service’s Weather Prediction Center.

Cass County Sheriff Jesse Jahner said at a news conference Saturday that two men and a woman were killed at two locations around the town of Enderlin, N.D., late Friday. Enderlin is about 57 miles southwest of Fargo. Thousands of households lost power.

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Hours earlier in a post on the social media site X, the National Weather Service in Grand Forks said two deaths were attributed to a tornado that hit a home.

Tornado confirmed

Timothy Lynch, lead forecaster with the National Weather Service office in Grand Forks, said the storm had been confirmed as a tornado but that crews were still working to determine its strength and highest wind speeds. He said the storm affected the neighboring counties of Cass and Ransom.

“We still have people out investigating and gathering information on what happened. It was a pretty major event,” Lynch told the Associated Press on Saturday.

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Heavy winds also swept across localized areas of Minnesota. The weather service reported wind gusts of up to 106 mph at Bemidji Regional Airport overnight.

“I cannot ever recall hearing a rushing wind like that!” Bemidji Mayor Jorge Prince posted on Facebook in the early hours Saturday. “Emerged from our basement to find our neighborhood with lots of trees down and several homes with severe damage.”

Prince also said officials were responding to many downed power lines and several gas line leaks. Beltrami County Emergency Management said the damage to the Bemidji area is “extensive.” Localized torrential rain flooded downtown Bemidji and stalled vehicles, Beltrami County Emergency Management Director Christopher Muller said later Saturday.

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Many Bemidji-area businesses posted on social media Saturday saying they were without power and closed for the day. Muller warned residents to prepare for “long-term power outages” because of damage to infrastructure.

Hurley said that same storm moved on to parts of Michigan but had weakened. It was expected to cross over lower Ontario, Canada, and back into the United States to hit upstate New York on Saturday night into Sunday.

“Still wind and hail threat,” Hurley said of the enhanced risk to upstate New York. “It doesn’t look like it’s going to be as robust perhaps as we saw last night.”

Millions face extreme heat

Almost 59 million Americans were under an extreme heat warning Saturday, Hurley said, as the high temperatures combined with humidity pushed an above-average heat index for the Northern Plains and the Midwest.

Parts of Nebraska, the Dakotas, Minnesota and Iowa could face temperatures “easily 20 degrees above normal,” Hurley said, including some areas reaching triple digits. It may be expected in July, he said, but it’s rarer to see in June.

“A lot of these areas have been pretty cool with rain over the last month or so, so it’s going to be a little bit of a shock,” Hurley said.

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Cooling centers were open in cities including Omaha and Minneapolis as officials warned the public of dangerously hot conditions.

An additional 84 million people were under a heat advisory as forecasters expect the extreme weather to migrate eastward toward the Great Lakes, the mid-Atlantic and the Northeast, where the “heat risk category is a 4 of 4” into early next week, Hurley said.

Meanwhile, parts of the Great Basin and the Southwest may be hot but are seeing relief from below-normal temperatures.

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