Augusta, GA
Storm lays waste to Bamberg, downs trees, cuts power across region
BAMBERG, S.C. (WRDW/WAGT) – A severe thunderstorm swept through the Augusta region Tuesday, downing trees, knocking out power and damaging buildings, but perhaps nowhere was the damage more severe than Bamberg, where a possible tornado left the town in tatters.
In Augusta, the storm left its mark but may have been milder than many prepared for.
That wasn’t the case along the southern edge of the storm front, which brought a tornado warning in Screven County and a left swath of destruction in Bamberg and Allendale counties.
In Bamberg, debris, building insulation and even bricks were scattered over wide areas.
Multiple trees were uprooted, several businesses reported damage, one person was trapped and several roads were blocked.
Old Bamberg City Hall – a building that’s been on the National Register of Historic Places since 2005 – may have been destroyed. Bamberg Rustic Furniture and More reported damage.
There were no injuries, according to state Rep. Justin Bamberg, but more than 1,200 customers were without power in the hours after the storm.
BAMBERG PHOTO GALLERY:
Characterizing the damage as “extreme,” Bamberg County spokeswoman Alisha Moore urged residents to stay off the roads so emergency crews could do their work.
In keeping with that sentiment, students will stay home Wednesday for a day of e-learning.
Moore said she was at home when the storm hit and her house shook and the windows started to rattle. She took shelter in her bathroom.
A tree came through her bedroom window.
“Not gonna lie – it was terrifying,” she said in a Facebook video.
The National Weather Service will send a team Wednesday to determine whether the damage was caused by a tornado or straight winds.
Not far away, Allendale also received some heavy damage as the storm passed through.
Trees were toppled and splintered, with vegetation and other debris strewn across yards.
ALLENDALE PHOTO GALLERY:
The experience was milder in Augusta, where trees came down on power lines and some roadways, but where limbs weren’t left in shards by the high winds.
Even though the storm was strongest in Augusta from noon to 3, it had rained all night and winds had begun kicking up during the morning commute.
That’s when there was a wave of power outages, leaving 8,492 customers without electricity in Columbia County as of 1:21 p.m. Within a few minutes, that number was cut to 5,737.
After leaving death and damage in Alabama, Florida and Atlanta, the first heavy line of the storm moved through Augusta around 1 p.m., then the next wave came through just before 2.
Gusts up to 60 mph and up to 2 inches of rain were expected as the storm moved eastward.
PHOTO GALLERY – AUGUSTA AND ELSEWHERE:
In Richmond County, two closed doors at an industrial storage building were ripped off their hinges by the wind near the intersection of Jimmy Dyess Parkway and Wrightsboro Road.
Elsewhere in Augusta, water mains broke at Wallace Street and Laney Walker Boulevard and along North Wheeler Parkway west of Bobby Jones Expressway.
A tree came down on some power lines along Walton Way near Fleming Drive, and crews were quickly on the scene cutting it up. A tree also came down on Walton Way at Carriage Drive.
In Columbia County, just before 1 p.m., a home was damaged in the 4400 block of Whisperwood in Martinez, where a tree fell on a house and went through the roof. Storm damage was also reported at 2227 Dry Creek Road.
Just before 2 p.m., Grovetown police were on the scene at the intersection of West Robinson Avenue and Wrightsboro Road after a traffic signal came down.
Also in Columbia County:
- At Knob Hill Farm Road and Knob Hill Drive in Evans, tree limbs were blocking the road.
- On Old Union Road in Harlem, a tree was downed by the storm.
- In the 500 block of 524 McKinnes Line in Evans, a storm drain backed up, flooding a yard.
- In the 4000 block of Lee Place in Martinez, tree limbs were blocking the roadway.
- At Tom Bartles Road and Ray Owens Road in Appling, a tree was downed by the storm.
- In the 6500 block of George Walton Drive in Harlem, a tree was downed by the storm.
- At Baker Place Road and Kelarie Way in Grovetown, a downed tree was blocking the roadway.
- At Mullikin Road and Eagle Trace Lane in Evans, tree limbs were blocking the roadway.
- At Stevens Creek Road and St. Andrew’s Way in Martinez, a downed tree fell on a power line.
- On Lietz Court in Grovetown, a tree was downed by the storm.
- On Shucraft Road in Appling, a tree was downed by the storm.
- On Ridge Road in Appling, a tree was downed by the storm.
- Off Cobbham Road near Marshall Drive in Appling, trees were downed by the storm.
Elsewhere in the CSRA, damage included:
- Just before noon, lightning struck a house in the 8200 block of Gregory Road in Aiken County. No flames were reported, but there was smoke.
- Treetrops were snapped off in Lincoln County, as recorded in a photo sent to News 12 by a viewer.
- Multiple trees and power lines were down across Saluda County, with roughly 500 power outages. Trees were down on Rock Hill Road, Greenwood Highway, Summerland Highway at Corley Bridge Road and Chappells Highway between Centennial and Highway 702. There was also a broken power pole with lines down on Ridge Spring Highway.
- Just before 2:30 p.m. in Edgefield County, a tree was reported blocking Red Hill Road between Antioch Baptist Church and Martintown Road. Trees also came down on roadways near Johnston Highway and Long Cane Road, near Sleepy Creek Road and Timmerman Road and in the 2100 block of Highway 23 West, blocking both lanes.
- Trees were down in Burke County on Seven Oaks Road near Botsford Church Road, Story Mill Road at Spread Oak Road, Quaker Road and Cohen Road, and Thompson Bridge Road at Cox Place Road.
- In Washington County, multiple trees were down across the area, and rescuers were on the way to a report of a tree falling on an occupied camper.
- Just before 2 p.m., Highway 171 North was closed in Glascock County between Beall Springs Road and Chalker Road after a power pole came down.
Copyright 2024 WRDW/WAGT. All rights reserved.
Augusta, GA
Sandusky Ohio News | Sandusky Register
Augusta, GA
Augusta’s Turpin neighborhood to get affordable homes with $1.85M federal grant
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) – The historic Turpin neighborhood will soon welcome more affordable homes after Augusta Habitat for Humanity was awarded $1.85 million in federal funding this week.
The grant will fund the construction of at least 12 homes in the area.
“Habitat for Humanity applied for federal funding, and they were awarded the funding,” said District 2 Commissioner Stacy Pulliam.
Reviving a historic community
The Turpin neighborhood was once home to professionals, including educators, doctors, and lawyers.
“These big professionals that lived mostly over this way,” one resident said of the neighborhood’s history.
Pulliam described the area’s former prominence as “its grand days of glory, when it was the place.”
The project brings together city organizers and community partners through the Georgia Initiative for Community Housing, or GICH.
“We have so many partners. We have the Housing Authority on board. We have a representative from the Hub on board,” Pulliam said. “There’s so many great partners at the table that’s helping pull all of this together.”

Federal support and future plans
The project received backing from Senators Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock.
Habitat for Humanity, with support from GICH, focused its application on Turpin Hill intentionally, as officials say the community had been needing to be addressed for years.
With Habitat for Humanity continuing to advocate for more funds, Pulliam said their motivation could lead to additional housing development in the future.
“We keep going and going and going,” she said. “Now we can do 20. Now we can do multifamily. So it’s fueling our fire to get more housing, but not just housing, to clean up the area.”
Copyright 2026 WRDW/WAGT. All rights reserved.
Augusta, GA
Trump to sign emergency order to pay TSA agents as Augusta airport preps for golf week
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) – President Donald Trump said he will sign an emergency declaration to pay TSA agents, as nearly 500 have quit since the shutdown began.
More than 40 percent of Atlanta’s TSA agents did not show up on Wednesday, leading to long lines at Atlanta’s airport and across the country. It is unclear when President Trump will sign the emergency order. TSA workers will miss their second paycheck Friday.
In a statement on Truth Social, President Trump said, “I am going to sign an Order instructing the Secretary of Homeland Security, Markwayne Mullin, to immediately pay our TSA Agents in order to address this Emergency Situation.”
The president thanked TSA agents. The Department of Homeland Security as a whole will not be funded at this time. The Coast Guard and FEMA are among the agencies still impacted.
If senators do not reach a deal to fund the department on Friday, they are set for a two-week recess.
Augusta airport prepares for tournament week
TSA workers are a concern as tournament week approaches in Augusta. Security and safety are also concerns after a plane collided with a fire truck at LaGuardia Airport.
Augusta Regional Airport and its fire department are working to keep visitors safe as they fly in for tournament week.
William Kovalchuk, a sergeant with the Augusta Airport Fire Department, operates an airport-specific fire truck.
“There’s a ton of traffic and a ton of congestion. This whole ramp area where I showed you guys a little bit ago, it’ll be completely filled with aircraft,” Kovalchuk said.

Tournament week sees the regional airport become a global hub, with flights in from 13 extra cities and more than 200 private planes parked on the tarmac.
Lauren Smith, deputy director of Augusta Regional Airport, said the airport works closely with the FAA during tournament week.
“During that time, we actually work very closely with the FAA to bring in additional controllers,” Smith said.
Extra controllers keep the airspace and runway safe. Enhanced safety measures are in place inside the terminal as well.
“Overall, everyone brings in more staff. The tenants, the rental car agencies, the airlines, the airport itself,” Smith said.
The fire department stages a second station across the airport to cover every flight.
“The manning will be stepped up quite a bit,” Kovalchuk said. “We don’t want to see anything happen, but we’re prepared for it.”
The airport said the average wait time is still less than an hour to get through security during tournament week.
Copyright 2026 WRDW/WAGT. All rights reserved.
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