Georgia Storm

Storms, 19 tornados caused at least $125M damage
Atlanta tornado cost more but Sunday's affected more people


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 05/15/08

Damage from severe storms and 19 tornados on Mother's Day will likely eclipse $125 million in insured losses, Georgia's insurance commissioner said Thursday.

Following a helicopter tour of storm-ravaged counties, Commissioner John Oxendine called the destruction "the worst I've seen in my 14 years" in the job. "We're seeing significant damage, not only to homes and timber, but to large businesses."


 
See photos from the air!

Two people died and about 6,000 homes were damaged, and the Georgia Emergency Management Agency declared the 13 affected state disaster areas. Oxendine said the mid-March tornado that devastated the downtown Atlanta area had a higher price tag, but "more people were impacted" by Sunday's storms.

Oxendine based his assessment on reports received from insurance companies around the state and his own visual evaluation as he flew over affected areas Thursday. He added $25 million to his prior estimate of $100 million in storm-related losses to account for extensive commercial damage.

"And that could go higher," he said, noting he would visit the town of Darien in McIntosh County on Monday. The National Weather Service reported an EF-4 class tornado — one of only nine ever recorded in Georgia — in the coastal county, with recorded winds speeds of up to 180 m.p.h.

"That might be the hardest-hit area," Oxendine said.

Fifteen tornados touched down in central and north Georgia, with another four, including the McIntosh twister, in the southern end of the state.

Flying over Douglas, Clayton and Bibb counties Thursday morning, the insurance commissioner got his first glimpse at the brutal impact of the weather.

"These folks were really lucky," he said of homeowners whose homes were damaged but who escaped unharmed. Tornado-struck homes appeared as a patchwork of thatched roofs, blue tarp and the occasional shattered wood.

On the ground in Macon, however, the devastation was more palpable.

"It is amazing nobody was killed in this," said Carol's Linens owner Carol Kaplan, whose storefront was blown out in a hail of shattered glass and debris.

Around Macon, the seat of Bibb County, roofs were blown off or caved in, trees were upended and toppled onto cars, windows were shattered and power lines were down.

Hank Dews surveyed the remains of the home he grew up in, where the tornado collapsed a tree and a brick chimney into the master bedroom where his mother used to sleep — and where tenants, who moved into the home April 1, could have been, had they not just left for an out-of-town trip.

"Mother had moved out, and the renters left to go to Florida at 3 o'clock Sunday morning," Dews said. "The tornado hit at 5:30 (a.m.)."

Part of the reason for Oxendine's trip was to help tornado and storm victims having trouble getting response from insurance adjusters.

Macon homeowners like Charlie Wilson have been waiting days for aid.

"Allstate told us Sunday we'd hear from them within 72 hours," Wilson said. "We haven't heard anything since."

Oxendine said insurance adjusters were overtaxed with work from last weekend's storms, the March tornado and the spate of severe weather that has plagued much of the country recently.

"These large national companies have been hit across the country," he said. "There are only so many human beings."

But insurance companies should live up their responsibilities, Oxendine said. On Monday, he sent a directive to statewide insurance brokers demanding that they respond to their customers' claims as quickly as possible. "We want to make sure everyone get help through this," he said.

For help with claims stemming from the recent storms paid, residents were told to call the commissioner's Consumer Services Division, 404-656-2070 or, outside metro Atlanta, 800-656-2298.

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