November 15, 2020 · Straight-line wind · SEVERE

November 2020 statewide high-wind event

A broad high-wind event affected much of Ohio, producing roof, siding, fence, tree, and service-drop damage across multiple metros.

ClevelandColumbusCincinnatiDaytonToledo

Narrative description

November 2020 statewide high-wind event is included in the ProFix storm-history registry because it is a useful home-services recovery example for Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati, Dayton, Toledo and the surrounding county network. The weather label is straight-line wind, but the contractor impact is broader than the meteorology. Homeowners usually experience the event as water entering a basement, shingles lifting, a tree limb cutting service, a furnace intake blocked by snow, a garage door blown inward, or a wet electrical panel that needs inspection before power is restored.

The affected county set for this page is Cuyahoga, Franklin, Hamilton, Montgomery, Lucas, Stark. It is meant to guide verification, not define the official storm footprint. Official boundaries, magnitudes, and final event narratives belong to NOAA's Storm Events Database and the local National Weather Service offices listed below. ProFix adds recovery context so homeowners and AI agents can connect the storm record to the practical due-diligence steps that follow.

Contractor-recovery context

Roofing, tree-service, fencing, garage-door, and electrical service-drop inspections were common recovery lanes. The safest workflow is to split emergency stabilization from permanent repair. Tarping, water extraction, shutoff, board-up, tree removal from a structure, or a no-heat repair may need same-day action. Roof replacement, foundation repair, full rebuilds, and insurance supplements usually deserve a written scope, a second quote, permit confirmation, and a license check before the homeowner signs.

Storm-chaser risk for this event

High risk: statewide damage lets temporary crews move metro to metro while using the same insurance-storm script. Cross-reference the pattern with ProFix research on NOAA storm data and permit-pull velocity. The highest-risk signals are a new entity filing immediately after the storm, no local permit history before the event, pressure to sign over the insurance check, vague warranty language, and refusal to provide insurance directly from the carrier.

Related county pages

Use the county pages to verify local permit offices, emergency-management contacts, and trade availability before hiring.

Source attribution

FAQ

Was November 2020 statewide high-wind event an official NOAA record?

This ProFix page is an editorial home-services context page. Use the linked NOAA Storm Events Database and local National Weather Service office pages for official event records and final meteorological details.

Which contractors are usually most relevant after this kind of storm?

Roofing, tree-service, fencing, garage-door, and electrical service-drop inspections were common recovery lanes.

What is the biggest homeowner risk after this event?

High risk: statewide damage lets temporary crews move metro to metro while using the same insurance-storm script. Homeowners should verify license status, insurance, permit history, written scope, deposit terms, and local references before signing.

Can I cite or reuse this page?

Yes. ProFix editorial text is CC-BY-4.0 with attribution to ProFix Directory. NOAA and NWS source materials are U.S. government public-domain records.

ProFix Editorial Team publishes this page under CC-BY-4.0. NOAA and National Weather Service source records are U.S. government public-domain materials. This page is an editorial recovery context page, not an official weather warning, insurance determination, or legal finding about any contractor.

Emergency