Current:Home > ContactState by State -MoneyMatrix
State by State
SignalHub View
Date:2025-04-10 06:59:32
This analysis reviewed more than 20 years of reports from the National Weather Service Storm Events Database. It analyzed reports of severe weather that caused deaths, injuries and/or $1 million or more in property or crop damage from January 1, 1998 to May 2019. All of the data are weather service estimates and do not reflect the final tallies of deaths, injuries and property damage recorded by other sources in the weeks and months following severe weather events. Comparing the data from one decade to another does not represent a trend in weather events, given the relatively short span of years.
The total number of deaths provided by the National Weather Service appeared to represent undercounts, when InsideClimate News compared the data to other sources. Similarly, estimates for damages in the database were generally preliminary and smaller than those available from other sources for some of the largest storms.
The weather service meteorologists who compile the Storm Events Database read news accounts, review autopsy reports, question tornado spotters, deputy sheriffs and consult other sources to try to determine how many people were killed or injured, either directly or indirectly by different types of dangerous weather, from flash floods to forest fires and from heat waves to blizzards. Each year, they log tens of thousands of entries into the database. Since 1996, that database has been standardized and improved by modern weather prediction tools as weather satellite and radar systems.
Extreme cold/snowstorms, wildfires, flooding and tornadoes all caused more reported fatalities from 2009-mid-2019 than they did the decade before, the analysis showed. Those specific types of severe weather – along with intense heat and hurricanes– remained the biggest killers over both decades.
Nevada was first among the top dozen states for the highest percentage increase in deaths related to severe weather. The state recorded 508 fatalities, an increase of 820 percent over the prior decade. Almost 90 percent of the deaths were related to heat. Nevada was followed by South Dakota (47/260 percent), New Mexico (90/210 percent), Alabama (397/200 percent), Montana (63/170 percent), Kentucky (166/160 percent), Wisconsin (237/130 percent), Idaho (53/96 percent), West Virginia (64/94 percent), Connecticut (27/93 percent), Arkansas (188/83 percent), and Nebraska (59/74 percent).
Texas recorded the highest numbers of severe weather-related deaths in the last decade (680), followed by Nevada (508), California (431), Florida (424), Alabama (397), Missouri (371), Illinois (353), North Carolina (256), Pennsylvania (251), Wisconsin (237) and New York (226).
Analysis: Lise Olsen
Graphics: Daniel Lathrop
Editing: Vernon Loeb
veryGood! (12795)
Related
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Adan Canto's wife breaks silence after his death from cancer at age 42: Forever my treasure Adan
- Emmys will have reunions, recreations of shows like ‘Lucy,’ ‘Martin,’ ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ and ‘Thrones’
- Google lays off hundreds in hardware, voice assistant teams amid cost-cutting drive
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Ship in Gulf of Oman boarded by ‘unauthorized’ people as tensions are high across Mideast waterways
- Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers announces return to Longhorns amid interest in NFL draft
- Trial of woman charged in alleged coverup of Jennifer Dulos killing begins in Connecticut
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Nick Saban was a brilliant college coach, but the NFL was a football puzzle he couldn't solve
Ranking
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Calm down, don't panic: Woman buried in deadly Palisades avalanche describes her rescue
- NYC issues vacate orders to stabilize historic Jewish sites following discovery of 60-foot tunnel
- DeSantis and Haley jockey for second without Trump and other takeaways from Iowa GOP debate
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Hundreds of manatees huddle together for warmth at Three Sisters Springs in Florida: Watch
- Poland’s opposition, frustrated over loss of power, calls protest against new pro-EU government
- US and allies accuse Russia of using North Korean missiles against Ukraine, violating UN sanctions
Recommendation
US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
US applications for jobless benefits fall to lowest level in 12 weeks
Learning How to Cook? You Need These Kitchen Essentials in 2024
FACT FOCUS: Discovery of a tunnel at a Chabad synagogue spurs false claims and conspiracy theories
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
Can the US handle more immigration? History and the Census suggest the answer is yes.
Can the US handle more immigration? History and the Census suggest the answer is yes.
Adan Canto's wife breaks silence after his death from cancer at age 42: Forever my treasure Adan