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Severe Threat May 15-16, 2025

I don't understand this sentiment. What would a high risk have changed? I'm genuinely curious.
In my opinion it wouldn't have made much of a difference if any. 3/14 was a Moderate Risk and it produced 3 50+ mile track tornadoes that day including 2 EF3'S and 1 EF4. The Diaz tornado of course was the strongest but the path length was semi long track. Like 18.62 miles.
 
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Sorry for the low-quality image (stuff still circulating obviously, quality isn't the biggest concern) but this is a home wiped off its foundation in Marion, IL
 
As we've seen several other cases of, this TORP is radar-indicated. I think it's something WFOs must've started doing a few years ago, it seems like a recent development.
I understand why. I mean I vividly remember the El Reno tornado having a downstream Tornado Emergency with the line "a tornado may develop again at any time."
 
regarding the high risk debate, a lot of children who were injured from the STL tornado were coming home from school, which may not have happened if we were under a high risk (which would've persuaded schools to shut down for the day)
STL was barely within the enhanced risk, a high risk would not have solved that unless it included STL (which I would disagree with)
Still incredibly unfortunate to hear that news though :(
 
regarding the high risk debate, a lot of children who were injured from the STL tornado were coming home from school, which may not have happened if we were under a high risk (which would've persuaded schools to shut down for the day)
With it being a metropolitan area, I don't think they would've shut down the schools for the day. St. Louis was barely in the MOD risk, so they probably wouldn't have been placed in the HIGH risk anyways.
 
Could this produce? (Just right of center)
IMG_5847.jpeg
 
In regards to the scale of this outbreak and the historic comparison, I don't think tonight will top any lists. However, I think as a whole, the several day tornado outbreak sequence we're in the midst of may get up pretty high on the historic list. If it goes over 100 total tornadoes that'll make this year only the 4th in history that has had 3 or more 100+ tornado outbreak sequences. The other years are 2004, 2011, and 2024.
 
Not a tornado doctor, but I don't think the ex-Morganfield storm is gonna imminently produce (thankfully).
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