Emergency crews early Sunday sifted through the wreckage left behind by a wave of tornadoes that swept across Iowa before midnight.
One of the twisters caused enough damage to prompt Iowa Gov. Terry E. Branstad to issue a disaster proclamation in Monona County, according to a statement released by the governor's office.
The proclamation allows officials to use state funds to help.
Authorities said the extent of the damage is unclear because the twister struck at night. Stefanie Bond, a public information officer for the state's Homeland Security & Emergency Management Division, said the National Guard is in Mapleton. Bond also said that natural gas service has temporarily been shut off in the city.
Amateur video recorded by storm chasers shows a large funnel cloud spinning across a flat terrain outside Mapleton.
In the background, a passenger can be heard exclaiming, "It's going to hit that town! ... Mapleton's in big trouble!"
Bruce Spence, a Red Cross government liaison, told CNN that as of Sunday morning there had been no reports of deaths or injuries in Mapleton. However, the damage to the town was "extensive," Spence said.
"The whole town is without power. Main Street is a disaster," Spence said. "They've shut down the town. As we speak, I'm looking down one of the residential streets. There's debris all over, trees are down."
"This isn't going to get fixed soon," Spence said.
You know, just saying one of those essential government functions in Tornado Alley are NOAA weather forecasting, emergency communications of impending tornadoes, first responders after the storm, and infrastructure repair and clean up in the short, medium, and long term. Gov Branstad, a Republican, is ready to activate state funds for these services. Should the folks who do these jobs make a fair wage?
Gov. Branstad doesn't think so. Luckily there were enough Democrats in Iowa's Senate to stop him from going Scott Walker or John Kasich on Iowa's public employees.
This time. State public employees are "non-essential" and "living off the taxpayer dime" and have to bear the brunt of budget cuts...until you need them to say, risk their lives trying to save people or rebuild a town destroyed by a tornado. Then it's "Why didn't the state respond fast enough to this disaster?"
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