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Two tales of eastside Lansing’s big storm

FRIDAY, July 14 — Clinton Mireles, who lives on South Fairview Avenue on Lansing’s east side, took a chance Thursday when the early-morning storm slowed a bit to run into his backyard to …

Clinton Mireles heard the storm that ripped through the city’s east side around midnight Thursday. He described hearing a sound like “an explosion.” When he and his family went outside to investigate, they found a tree had fallen, damaging the corner of the roof of his front porch and crushing his Chevy Impala. The car was the family’s only source of transportation. – Todd Heywood
This home, at 226 Leslie St., had the entire southern side ripped off during the storms. One can look right into the house. The city has since placed a red tag on the home. – Todd Heywood
The tree that fell on the home that Clinton Mireles, his wife and two daughters rent came up from the roots, and smashed into t the front corner of the porch roof. The tree hit the home just six feet from the room where his youngest daughter was sleeping. The tree also hit his neighbor’s house and crushed his blue Chevy Impala, the family’s only transportation. – Todd Heywood
Local housing developer and landlord Dave Muylle laughed when asked about the decorative bike that survived the s – Todd Heywood
Todd Heywood
Todd Heywood
Todd Heywood

‘It was just this loud, intense sound coming from outside like something had blown up.’

FRIDAY, July 14 — Clinton Mireles, who lives on South Fairview Avenue on Lansing’s east side, took a chance around midnight Thursday when the storm slowed a bit to run into his backyard to deal with a picnic table that was in a precarious position.

“I heard a loud like a kind of in the distance like an engine or something,” he said. “So, I ran inside. Within maybe 30 seconds of me being inside, my basement window busted open and all I heard was a roar. Like it sounded like a gas meter had just got broken and it was just this loud, intense sound coming from outside like something had blown up.”

When he and his wife and their daughters looked outside, they saw that a large fallen tree had taken a corner of the front porch roof and smashed into their blue Chevy Impala.

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Jerry Dembrowski, who lives on Regent Street, walked through his property with City Pulse explaining how a tree fell from the red-tagged property next door, hit his home and rolled off, obliterating his patio.

The damage was mostly isolated to a five-street section from Shepard Street on the west to Fairview on the east and between Michigan Avenue and Kalamazoo Street. Some residents who spoke with City Pulse during a walk-through of the damaged area said they believed a tornado had hit the area. City officials disagreed.

“It was most likely a straight-line-winds event that caused the damage,” said Scott Bean, city spokesperson.

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“Straight-line winds are often responsible for most of the wind damage associated with a thunderstorm,” the National Weather Service explained online. “These winds are often confused with tornadoes because of similar damage and wind speeds. However, the strong gusty winds associated with straight-line winds are unlike the rotating winds of a tornado. If you were to survey the damage pattern left by straight-line winds, you would see debris, such as uprooted trees, laid out in nearly parallel rows.”

The Ingham County Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Management noted in a post early Thursday morning that WLNS had registered a wind gust of 63 mph. At 11:30 p.m. on Wednesday night, the agency also warned of “torrential rains and potentially strong wind gusts” associated with the storm rolling into the area at the time.

Rob Dale, deputy emergency manager for Ingham County Sheriff’s Department, said in a Facebook message that based on reports from Lansing Board of Water & Light and pictures from the public, the event appeared to be “downburst straight-line winds (which matches up with the rader). The NWS also didn’t have anything they saw that indicated any different.”

Bean and Lansing Mayor Andy Schor spent four hours assessing the damage and talking with affected residents on Thursday. Meanwhile, the Lansing Board of Water & Light and city assets from the public services division were working to remove debris from the roads and repair damaged power lines.  At the peak of the storm and damage, 1,100 BWL customers reported outages.  By Thursday morning, 600 people remained with out power as the utility worked to restore service, said Bean.