DETROIT/TULSA โ The central United States is reeling this weekend as search-and-rescue teams comb through the splintered remains of homes, schools, and businesses following a lethal two-day severe weather outbreak that has claimed at least six lives.
From the rural plains of western Oklahoma to the lakeside neighborhoods of southern Michigan, families are beginning the grim process of surveying what remains after a violent atmospheric clash spawned a series of suspected tornadoes. The storms, which intensified rapidly on Friday after migrating from northern Indiana, left a footprint of destruction that has prompted emergency declarations in both states.
The Michigan Toll: A Rare March Disaster
In southern Michigan, where tornadoes are historically rare during the early days of March, the devastation was both sudden and absolute.
- Union Lake: The hardest-hit area saw three confirmed fatalities and over a dozen injuries. National Weather Service (NWS) survey teams confirmed an EF-3 tornadoโwith estimated wind speeds of at least 150 mphโtore through the region, leveling structures near Union City.
- Cass County: Approximately 50 miles southwest of Union Lake, a 12-year-old boy was tragically killed, becoming the youngest victim of the outbreak.
- State of Emergency: Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer has initiated a state of emergency for Branch, Cass, and St. Joseph counties to expedite the arrival of disaster relief and cleanup resources.
Oklahoma: A Tragic Thursday and Friday
The outbreak began in Oklahoma on Thursday night, when a storm system turned deadly in the western part of the state.
- Fairview: A mother and her 13-year-old daughter were killed when their vehicle was struck by a tornado late Thursday, marking the beginning of a grim 48-hour period.
- Beggs: On Friday, a second tornado cut a roughly four-mile path of destruction south of Tulsa, claiming the lives of two people inside a home. Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt has declared a state of emergency in several counties, urging residents to assist neighbors as power crews struggle to restore electricity to thousands of customers.

โEverything Was Just Goneโ
For those in the direct path of the storms, the experience was harrowing. In Union City, eyewitnesses described a terrifying scene as the sky turned a bruised purple, followed by the roar of the funnel cloud as it demolished homes on the far side of the lake.
“We look out the window and saw the tornado go right down the strip… where my daughter is, where my parents, where I live down the road,” a Three Rivers resident told CBS News. “I was just very grateful that God protected my daughter and my mom and sister and my family.”
The Road Ahead
While the immediate threat in Michigan and Oklahoma has subsided, meteorologists at the Storm Prediction Center have issued warnings that the volatile weather system is pushing eastward. Roughly 90 million people from Texas to New York remain under varying degrees of risk as the system continues its trajectory, bringing with it the threat of heavy rainfall, damaging winds, and the potential for additional flash flooding.
As responders work to secure the rubble, the focus remains on accounting for every resident and providing for those left homeless. In the “Year of the Fire Horse,” the heartland has once again been reminded of the fragile nature of stability in the face of nature’s raw power.
