Residents begin cleanup with state help


Emergency sirens, generators, and chainsaws echoed through the city of Rome on Wednesday as residents and first responders worked to clean up the city as best they could after a catastrophic tornado touched down the day prior.

The National Weather Service on Wednesday afternoon said the tornado survey in Rome is on-going, but the survey team has so far found damage consistent with an EF2 rating, with estimated wind speeds of up to 135 mph.

Gov. Kathy Hochul declared a state of emergency across the state after the storm and visited the city of Rome.

“I can only describe this as a tragic day here in Oneida County in the city of Rome,” she said. “As I was landing, coming in from New York City, you can’t imagine the impact until you see it from the sky and how vast the destruction is. You see entire swaths of trees collapsed like toothpicks, houses with roofs gone, and churches that have been here since the 1800s collapsed.”



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