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Nearly all power restored in Gaylord, Mich., after tornado, police say

JAKE MAY/MLIVE.COM/THE FLINT JOURNAL VIA AP
                                Resident Stephanie Kerwin, center, holds her baby Octavius in one arm and dog Pixie in the other as she and her family carry what they could salvage from her home in Nottingham Forest Mobile Home Park in Gaylord, Mich., following a tornado the day before. “This morning is when it first hit me…I could have lost people that I really love. I am so grateful,” Kerwin said.
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JAKE MAY/MLIVE.COM/THE FLINT JOURNAL VIA AP

Resident Stephanie Kerwin, center, holds her baby Octavius in one arm and dog Pixie in the other as she and her family carry what they could salvage from her home in Nottingham Forest Mobile Home Park in Gaylord, Mich., following a tornado the day before. “This morning is when it first hit me…I could have lost people that I really love. I am so grateful,” Kerwin said.

JAKE MAY/MLIVE.COM/THE FLINT JOURNAL VIA AP
                                Rubble and debris lie scattered after a tornado touched down a day earlier in Nottingham Forest Mobile Home Park in Gaylord, Mich.
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Swipe or click to see more

JAKE MAY/MLIVE.COM/THE FLINT JOURNAL VIA AP

Rubble and debris lie scattered after a tornado touched down a day earlier in Nottingham Forest Mobile Home Park in Gaylord, Mich.

JAKE MAY/MLIVE.COM/THE FLINT JOURNAL VIA AP
                                Resident Stephanie Kerwin, center, holds her baby Octavius in one arm and dog Pixie in the other as she and her family carry what they could salvage from her home in Nottingham Forest Mobile Home Park in Gaylord, Mich., following a tornado the day before. “This morning is when it first hit me…I could have lost people that I really love. I am so grateful,” Kerwin said.
JAKE MAY/MLIVE.COM/THE FLINT JOURNAL VIA AP
                                Rubble and debris lie scattered after a tornado touched down a day earlier in Nottingham Forest Mobile Home Park in Gaylord, Mich.

GAYLORD, Mich. >> Nearly all of the power lost following a deadly tornado that killed two people and flattened parts of a northern Michigan community has been restored, state police said today.

Police also said that everyone has been accounted for in Gaylord where Friday afternoon’s EF3 also left more than 40 people injured. Authorities had said Saturday that they were not able to account for one person.

Cleanup continued Sunday in the town of 4,200 people about 230 miles (370 kilometers) northwest of Detroit.

About 6,100 utility customers in Otsego County, where Gaylord is the county seat, lost power due to Friday’s storms, according to Jackson-based Consumers Energy. State police said Sunday that electricity has been restored to 99% of utility customers in Gaylord.

The tornado packed winds of 140 mph that tore roofs and walls from businesses and largely destroyed a mobile home park.

Such storms are uncommon in northern Michigan. State police Lt. Derrick Carroll has said the city doesn’t have tornado sirens, though anyone with a mobile phone got a “code red” warning from the weather service about 10 minutes before the tornado hit.

The Nottingham Forest mobile home park was one of the first places hit by the tornado. Two residents, described by police as being in their 70s, were killed.

Some trailers in the mobile home park were picked up and tossed about by the EF3 tornado. The National Weather Service rates tornados on a scale of 0-5.

Gaylord City Councilman Vic Ouellette told the Petoskey News-Review that flying debris cracked his wife’s vertebrae as the couple sheltered in their basement.

“I watched her literally get slammed with debris and particles from the flooring,” he said. “The wall slapped her on the back and knocked her down with stuff going on top of her.”

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