Delaware County officials recently toured areas affected by a severe storm in order to assess the damage and request assistance from state and federal authorities. The storm had caused significant destruction, leaving numerous homes and buildings damaged or destroyed. The officials surveyed the impacted areas to evaluate the extent of the devastation and determine the required resources for recovery. Subsequently, they sought aid from state and federal agencies to support the affected community in rebuilding efforts. The affected residents and businesses hope that the tour will aid in expediting financial and logistical support to restore their properties and livelihoods..
Delaware County residents continue to clean up the damage from Monday’s thunderstorm that brought wind gusts of up to 95 mph and prompted about 500 calls to the county’s 911 center. Hundreds of trees were either uprooted completely, had their tops shaved off, or lost branches, damaging power lines and about 45 homes. One house came off its foundation, another was split in two.
On a wooded cul-de-sac in Chadds Ford, it looked like a tornado hit, with barren trees scattered across properties. The National Weather Service says winds came through in straight lines and toppled trees that were decades-old.
Cat Tucker lives there with her two sons and husband. They all said as the storm came through, they never saw such large trees bend and snap that way before.
“We have a set of trees in the back that are very long and slender and so most storms, they wave, they flex pretty good with storms, but they were moving so violently that they started to snap,” said Tucker. “So that was go in the basement territory.”
Tucker said their house has two holes in the roof, and the damaged trees, which homeowners insurance does not cover, cost about $30,000 to clean up.
Her neighbor Susan Dunwody lost a 70-year-old white oak that she hung a swing from 31 years ago, when she first moved in.
“We used to sit on our front porch and you could just look into the trees,” said Dunwody. “Now you sit there and it’s sky. The whole landscape has changed. Every single house was so private. Now the privacy is gone.”
Although there was minimal damage to her house, seven trees uprooted completely, exposing roots that were 6 to 7 feet in diameter.
Residents in Delaware County, Pennsylvania are dealing with the aftermath of a severe thunderstorm that caused significant damage. Wind gusts of up to 95 mph resulted in hundreds of trees being uprooted or losing branches, damaging power lines and approximately 45 homes. Some houses were even completely destroyed or split in two. The storm, which occurred on August 7, 2023, was not a tornado but rather straight-line winds that toppled decades-old trees. Homeowners are now faced with costly cleanup expenses as their insurance does not cover tree damage. The landscape of the affected area has been drastically changed, causing a loss of privacy for many residents.
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