St. Louis is in the bullseye as a severe weather outbreak expected Monday threatens more than 55 million Americans across the Midwest and Mississippi Valley. Eight states are under a Level 3 out of 5 risk, with large hail, damaging winds and tornadoes all on the table.
The danger comes after days of violent weather already hit the South and central U.S., leaving a fresh reminder of what this system can do before it reaches its next target. In Enid, Oklahoma, a tornado that struck just before 8:30 p.m. on April 23 was later rated EF-4, and first light on April 24 showed the scale of the destruction.
Enid Mayor David Mason said Friday that at least 40 homes were damaged in the Gray Ridge area and that there were no fatalities and only minor injuries. He said he was grateful to report that while homes took significant damage, the storm did not kill anyone.
Texas also paid a price. Severe weather there displaced 20 families, caused several injuries and left one person dead, according to Wise County Judge J.D. Clark. Those impacts underline why Monday’s setup has drawn so much concern: the same kind of storm line that has already produced a confirmed EF-4 tornado can still march east into one of the nation’s busiest corridors.
That is the tension in this forecast. The warning is not abstract, and it is not arriving in a quiet weather pattern. The outbreak is expected to build after days of damage across the region, and St. Louis sits directly in the highest-risk path as Monday unfolds. For people in the Midwest and Mississippi Valley, the question is not whether the threat is real. It is how much of it will arrive at once.