‘It Was Nuts’: The Extreme Tests that Show Why Hail Is a Multibillion-Dollar Problem

The scars left on houses look like shotgun blasts, sometimes. In the aftermath of major storms, Andrew Shick, owner and chief executive of Illinois-based firm Roofing USA, has driven through suburbs blasted by hail and been left stunned by the damage.

Earlier this year, he visited a farm complex in western Illinois where roofs, even sturdy metal ones, were left pockmarked and perforated after 3-inch balls of ice fell from the sky. “It was nuts,” he recalls. There were baseball-sized holes in the lawn, even. “I’d never seen that before.”

Shick has been in the roofing business for several years now. He says it feels to him as though hailstorms are

Related News

How to Overcome Imposter Syndrome and Launch Your First Product with Confidence

Intel was on the brink of downfall. A twist in the AI race could boost its revival

Incident involving suspect with a knife closes Hwy. 101 in San Jose

Scott Pelley speaks: ‘CBS News is on fire’ and Bari Weiss should be removed

5 vehicles stolen from Alameda County parking garage in Oakland

Video footage shows large groups of people fighting in Oakland