Support People of Texas, Tornadoes Destroyed Homes
efter OPULENT PHILANTHROPY INCWe are a nonprofit organization dedicated to serving the needs of our local community. We are providing food and shelter to those in need during the Texas Tornadoes. We are committed to making a positive impact on the lives of those around us. By supporting Opulent Philanthropy Inc., you are supporting your community and helping to build a brighter future for all.
Texas Tornadoes Disaster Relief Fund: We have provided shelter and over a million meals during these disasters.
Every contribution, big or small, will bring much-needed assistance to families struggling in the aftermath of this disaster.
Here's how your donation can help:
$50 can provide a care package with essential supplies for a family in need.
$250 can help ensure a family displaced by the fire has access to food and shelter
$1,000 can help ensure a family displaced by the fire has long term access to food and shelter. www.opulentusa.org/texas
As the weekend storm that wreaked havoc from Texas to Alabama exits over the Atlantic overnight, a parallel wave of thunderstorms over the Great Lakes is headed east, and the Pacific is delivering a new winter front.
The weekend's low-pressure system whipped up winds that drove fires in Oklahoma and Texas and cranked out deadly tornadoes in Alabama, Arkansas, Missouri, Kansas and Mississippi.
Behind it tonight is a system of cooler, unstable air that is moving southeast and clashing with warm air in front of it. The front will continue to produce thunderstorms and the threat of more severe weather, including the possibility of tornadoes, as it moves east along a diagonal line from the Lower Great Lakes to the Appalachian Mountains, the weather service said.
It should exit overnight Monday into Tuesday, it said, but before that the front might linger a bit along the dense Northeast Coast, including New England's shoreline, the weather service said. By Tuesday, much of the East Coast should be in the clear, the weather service said.
The storm that wreaked weekend havoc exits as more extreme weather is possible, continued
The Pacific Ocean was churning out another classic winter storm that is moving southeast into Northern California tonight with 2 to 4 feet of snow and high winds as strong as 75 mph forecast for the Northern Sierra Nevada Mountains. Rain is falling in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Federal forecasters said an expanding low-pressure system will develop in the Rocky Mountains and the High Plains on Tuesday, once again whipping up winds to the south and increasing fire risk in the central and southern High Plains, which includes Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma and Texas, the latter two struck by wildfires Friday and into the weekend.
The weekend's tornado-producing system was charged up by a clash between cold and warm air in the atmosphere, which is not unusual for this time of year. The calendar marks the first day of spring on Thursday.
We are a nonprofit organization dedicated to serving the needs of our local community. From providing food and shelter to those in need to offering educational programs and support services, we are committed to making a positive impact on the lives of those around us. By supporting Opulent Philanthropy Inc., you are supporting your community and helping to build a brighter future for all.
We are a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the lives of people in need. Our mission is to provide assistance to those who are less fortunate and to create a better world for all. Through our programs and initiatives, we strive to make a positive impact on the world and to help those who need it the most.
