An old high school buddy of mine is reporting 600 homes damaged in Mena, Arkansas. I had no idea it was that bad there ...
Yes, Mena is pretty bad. The tornado ripped through a good portion of the city. I don't know where the city boundaries are exactly but it looks like about 1/3 of the city was damaged including the major damage swath that ripped right through the center of town. The width when it hit Mena Street appears to be about .4 miles.
I posted a blog entry
HERE showing before and after pics using Google's Street View.
Here is latest damage survey:
THIS WAS THE TORNADO THAT HIT MENA. THE TORNADO BEGAN 0.7 MILES SOUTH SOUTHEAST OF THE TOWN OF POTTER.
IT STAYED ON THE GROUND THROUGH MENA...AND LIFTED 3.2 MILES
NORTHEAST OF THE COMMUNITY OF INK. THE PATH LENGTH WAS 14.5 MILES.
THE PRELIMINARY RATING FOR THIS TORNADO IS AN EF3...WHICH CORRELATES
TO A WIND SPEED RANGE OF 136 TO 165 MPH.
THERE WERE THREE FATALITIES IN THE CITY OF MENA...AND AN UNKNOWN
NUMBER OF INJURIES.
and another tornado from I believe the previous supercell:
THE SECOND TORNADO AFFECTED NORTHWESTERN POLK COUNTY.
THIS TORNADO ACTUALLY BEGAN IN LE FLORE COUNTY OKLAHOMA IN THE TULSA
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AREA OF RESPONSIBILITY NEAR THE TOWN OF BIG
CEDAR. IT CROSSED THE STATE LINE 6.3 MILES NORTHWEST OF THE POLK
COUNTY COMMUNITY OF ROCKY. THE TORNADO CONTINUED ON THE GROUND FOR
2.7 MILES BEFORE DISSIPATING 4.7 MILES NORTH NORTHWEST OF ROCKY.
COUNTING THE TIME IN OKLAHOMA...THIS TORNADO WAS ON THE GROUND 9.2
MILES.THE TORNADO WAS RATED AN EF1...WHICH CORRELATES TO A WIND SPEED
RANGE OF 86 TO 110 MPH. DAMAGE WAS LIMITED TO TIMBER IN THE OUACHITA
NATIONAL FOREST...WITH HUNDREDS OF TREES BEING BLOWN DOWN.
edit: The Google Street View before and after is now viewable on the bottom of my chase/damage report -
HERE