Montana tornado rips roof off sports arena
By MATTHEW BROWN, Associated Press
Jun 21, 2010 9:59 AM CDT

A tornado ripped through two Billings neighborhoods, peeling the roof off a sports arena and several buildings. No deaths or major injuries were reported.

The tornado touched down at about 4:30 p.m. Sunday, running through Main Street and damaging about 10 small businesses in the city's northeast area before quickly hopscotching toward the 10,000-seat Rimrock Auto Arena about a half-mile away.

The twister hovered for about 15 minutes over the arena, which often hosts concerts and rodeos but was mostly empty Sunday afternoon.

"It would touch down and suck back up and touch down and touch down again," said Trooper Toman Baukema of the Montana Highway Patrol, who saw the tornado from a patrol station about a mile away.

Trees and telephone poles were snapped and tangles of insulation and metal roofing were left strewn for hundreds of yards _ some of it hanging from power lines.

About 20 members of the Montana National Guard and police watched over the damaged properties Sunday night and early Monday, when shop owners emerged to comb through the wreckage. At the Billings Dance Academy, owner Nicolle Ament and a half dozen of her students and teachers puled soggy dance costumes, boxed ballet shoes and photographs of young dancers from piles of broken wood and shattered glass.

"Has anyone seen my tiara?" student Jenson Frangevic asked.

Ament said the business was a total loss and there is little likelihood of reopening by the time sessions resume in the fall.

"We're just getting all the stuff we can save out," Ament said. "I'll wait to hear from my insurance guy to see what we can do."

The tornado caused minor damage at a bar and several other businesses but left just the walls of an auto glass store standing. Much of the roof could be seen in a nearby creek.

Fas-Break Auto Glass owner Kevin Massick and several members of his family picked through the shop's rubble, trying to salvage what they could. But there was little left.

"I'm in a total daze," Massick said, his face creased with emotion and tears welling up in his eyes. "It's a total loss, I don't know what I'm going to do. Start over, I guess."

Wind speeds from the tornado were estimated to range between 111 and 135 mph, National Weather Service meteorologist Keith Meier said. The last time Yellowstone County, which includes Billings, had that scale of a tornado was July 2, 1958, he said.

John Schilling said he saw the tornado approach Sunday as he was driving north on Main Street with his son. He had taken shelter under a carport at a motel because of the heavy hail and strong winds.

After a few minutes, Schilling saw the tornado envelop the Main Street Casino and a coin-operated laundry, then start to head south in his direction, hitting other businesses as it went.

"Then the roof came flying off that print shop, so we kept going," the 42-year-old said. "I wasn't going to stick around."

The tornado struck as a big storm system with golf ball-sized hail passed through the area.

The only reported injury was from someone hit in the head by a hail stone. City officials were also dealing with power outages and flooding from the storm, which sent about 2 feet of water into many streets.