A funnel cloud was reported near an industrial area south of Seattle, Wash., Monday morning, and fire officials say high winds damaged the roof of a building as a winter-weight storm that brought record rains and power outages to the Northwest moved through the region.
Central Pierce Fire and Rescue posted an image on Twitter of the commercial building in Frederickson in which portions of the roof were missing. Other images showed debris thrown across the road and under the tires of a parked car. No injuries were reported.
Central Pierce Fire and Rescue says a reported funnel cloud at about 7:20 a.m. in Frederickson, about 45 miles south of Seattle, caused the substantial damage.
Ted Buehner, The Warning Coordination Meteorologist at the National Weather Service office in Seattle, told KOMO Radio that staffers were going to the scene to determine whether it was a tornado.
The storm set rainfall records for September in Washington and Oregon.
“We basically had conditions well off shore that were very reminiscent of late fall-early winter,” said Dana Felton, meteorologist at the National Weather Service office in Seattle. “We had real cool air mass out of the Gulf of Alaska and a strong jet.”
Most people in the Northwest expect summer-like weather to stretch well into the month to ease the shift into the rainy season. Not this year. “It was a pretty quick transition,” Felton said.
Parts of the Northwest got more rain in a day or two than typically falls in the entire month. With Monday’s precipitation still to be added, it’s been the wettest September on record in Olympia and the second-wettest in Seattle. Nearly 8 inches fell in Olympia, topping a 1978 record and swamping the usual 1.7 inches that fall in that time, the National Weather Service said.
Sea-Tac Airport’s September total of 5.6 inches came second to a 1978 record, while downtown Portland saw 6.2 inches – the most since record-keeping began in 1872. The previous record for Portland was 5.52 inches in September 1927.
September records also were set in Eugene, 6.16 inches; Salem, 6.63 inches; Astoria, 10.51 inches; Hillsboro, 6.10 inches; and McMinnville, 7.58 inches.
High winds blew through Sunday night as the front moved east, knocking down trees that have not yet dropped their leaves. Winds off the Washington coast were clocked at up to 67 mph, the Weather Service reported.
Puget Sound Energy had about 12,000 customers out of service about midnight Sunday, the Bellevue-based utility reported. Seattle City Light reported it had about 3,200 customers out of service overnight. Portland General Electric had more than 90,000 customers out of power since the storm began.
With the worst of the storm past, cool, unsettled weather was forecast to continue to midweek. A low snow-level in the mountains mitigated the risk of flooding on most rivers, Felton said. It was snowing at Stevens Pass Monday morning and Paradise on Mount Rainier already had 5 inches.
(Associated Press writer Mike Baker contributed to this report.)
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