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Coweta fayette
Coweta fayette












coweta fayette
  1. COWETA FAYETTE HOW TO
  2. COWETA FAYETTE WINDOWS

Extensive roof and window damage and some interior wind and water damage occurred at the facility. While the tornado did appear to weaken from this point onward, it continued into the southern part of downtown and passed directly over the county Justice Center and adjacent administrative building which houses the courts, 911 facility and many other government functions. The original high school building was built in 1888 with brick walls and sturdy stone and woodwork, yet the only wall failure was to a portion of the second-story brick wall near the front of the main campus building.

COWETA FAYETTE WINDOWS

As the tornado moved east of Boone Dr it directly struck Newnan High School and surrounding athletics fields causing broken windows and doors and extensive roof and structure damage. The path width at this point was approximately 1850 yards or just over 1 mile. Four homes along Arlington Ct north of Lagrange St were destroyed with one having all exterior and interior walls removed but leaving a yellow vehicle nearly untouched in the garage. One home at the end of Fairview Dr had all exterior and interior walls removed. The tornado crossed Smokey Rd and Belk Rd and reached its maximum intensity of 170 mph as it entered the western city limits of Newnan. The family survived with no injuries by taking shelter in their bathtub. Many homes had major damage and one home had all but the back wall collapse. Winds quickly increased further to over 150 mph (EF3 intensity) near Timberland Trail south of Smokey Rd. Intensity increased to EF2 levels again near the Mountain Creek and Woodlawn Farms neighborhoods near where Smokey Rd intersects Fields Rd and Holbrook Rd. The tornado gained strength as it moved along JD Walton Rd north Smokey Rd, then traveled along Smokey Rd with trees falling on some homes. The tornado continued east-northeast south of GA-34 and crossed into Coweta County around 11:54 PM. A large wall and roof of a large industrial building on Mary Johnson Dr were ripped off. Two homes had roofs blown off completely, and a large stand of pine trees was completely snapped or uprooted on the north side of Franklin. Damage in Franklin was extensive with several homes heavily damaged or destroyed. The tornado grew in size and strength as it entered Franklin and crossed the Chattahoochee River with winds around 130 mph and a path width around 850 yards or 1/2 mile. The tornado traveled east-northeast gradually gaining intensity and producing more widespread damage to trees and power poles on GA- 34 1.3 miles west of Franklin.

COWETA FAYETTE HOW TO

“We gave a live demo on the big screen showing a desktop experience and created wallet cards with information on how to use and download the mobile app.Heard, Coweta, and Fayette County Tornadoĭamage Path - Heard, Coweta, Fayette Countiesĭetailed inlay map of peak EF-4 intensity area in Newnan.Ī violent, EF4 tornado that tracked 39 miles across Heard, Coweta and Fayette Counties first formed near Redland Dr north of GA- 34 around 11:37 PM with only minor damage to trees. The day featured a look into the future of the electric industry, as well as our internal communication,” shared Chellie. “We rolled out Jostle during a lunch and learn event. The committee found and recommended the Jostle platform. Their leadership team formed a committee to evaluate tools that would allow better communication between all departments and office locations.

coweta fayette

The CEO and VP-level leadership team committed to changing the perception that information wasn’t shared or that only limited people had access to what was happening in the organization. There was also a divide identified between personnel who worked in the corporate headquarters and district offices as well as those who were in the field most of the day. Instead, there was a feeling that some supervisors hoarded information and only shared it with specific employees. Based on cross-department conversations, it became apparent that employees felt information wasn't funneling throughout the cooperative from department to department.














Coweta fayette