The Columbus Dispatch

Biden visits town hit by tornado

Feds ‘not leaving’ area in Miss., president says

- Colleen Long and Michael Goldberg

ROLLING FORK, Miss. – President Joe Biden saw for himself the flattened homes, broken furniture and upended lives left behind by last week’s deadly tornado in Mississipp­i and pledged Friday that the federal government is not leaving until the area is back on its feet.

In the close-knit community of Rolling Fork, Biden read aloud the names of each of the 13 residents of the small town killed in the storm after touring the wreckage. He acknowledg­ed to residents that the road to recovery will be long and hard, but said he was committed to helping them through it.

“We’re not just here for today,” said Biden, standing near an animal shelter and a hardware store reduced to rubble by the powerful storm as he addressed members of the devastated community. “We’re going to get it done for you. We’re going to make sure you can stay right here.”

Biden lost Mississipp­i by more than 16 percentage points in 2020, but people were grateful that he came – and hopeful they won’t be forgotten. Resident Paul Rice said he welcomed the continued attention Friday’s visit brought to the town’s plight.

“Right now, everybody’s here, but I imagine it’ll start drying up,” said Rice, who was driving around town on an ATV to survey the damage and check on friends whose homes had been destroyed. “We’re Americans first and foremost. And that means we all have to work together.”

The president heaped praise on Republican Gov. Tate Reeves and the area’s longtime Democratic congressma­n, Rep. Bennie Thompson, for moving quickly to help Rolling Fork and surroundin­g communitie­s following last week’s storm.

Under a canopy set up blocks away from Rolling Fork’s obliterate­d city hall building, church volunteers doled out packages of breakfast sausages and pancakes with syrup Friday morning.

Joseph Thomas, a 77-year-old Vietnam veteran and lifelong Rolling Fork resident, arrived to claim his meal wearing a bandana emblazoned with an American flag.

Thomas said he never imagined any president would come to his rural Delta hometown.

“I’m proud that he is coming to this little small town. That means a lot to me,” Thomas said. “Because we need a lot of help to come through here, federal help, boots on the ground to put all this back together.”

Last week’s twister destroyed roughly 300 homes and businesses in Rolling Fork, and the nearby town of Silver City, leaving mounds of lumber, bricks and twisted metal. Hundreds of additional structures were badly damaged. Overall, the death toll in Mississipp­i stands at 21, based on those confirmed by coroners. One person died in Alabama, as well.

From Marine One, as they flew from Jackson to the area hardest hit by last week’s storm, the president and first lady Jill Biden got a view of the devastatio­n across acres of farmland – destroyed homes, toppled trees and piles

of debris.

“This is tough stuff,” Biden said as he was greeted by state, local and federal officials after arriving in Rolling Fork. “The most important thing is we got to let people know the reason for them to have hope, especially those who have lost somebody.”

Biden announced that the federal government will cover the total cost of the state’s emergency measures for the next 30 days, including overtime for first responders and debris cleanup. In addition, the Federal Emergency Management Agency will open disaster recovery centers in storm-ravaged counties to help residents access resources.

The Bidens also met with residents impacted by the storms and first responders, and received an operationa­l briefing from federal and state officials.

The devastatio­n from the storm is immense.

Residents watched as Biden walked through a leveled section of Rolling Fork, just blocks from the town’s downtown. A father held his toddler sleeping on his shoulder. Kids who aren’t in school because of the tornado crouched and watched. Just before the president arrived, a man picked through the wreckage, bent over to comb through the debris.

“I know there’s a lot of pain and it’s hard to believe in a moment like this: This community is going to be rebuilt, and rebuilt and built back better than it was before,” Biden assured residents.

Last week’s severe weather makes life even more difficult in an area already struggling economical­ly. Mississipp­i is one of the poorest states, and the majority-black Delta has long been one of the poorest parts of the state – a place where many people live paycheck to paycheck, often in jobs connected to agricultur­e.

Two of the counties walloped by the tornado, Sharkey and Humphreys, are among the most sparsely populated in the state, with only a few thousand residents in communitie­s scattered across wide expanses of cotton, corn and soybean fields. Sharkey’s poverty rate is 35%, and Humphreys’ is 33%, compared with about 19% for Mississipp­i overall and less than 12% for the entire United States.

FEMA administra­tor Deanne Criswell said some of the damage to the area’s infrastruc­ture will take much time to repair and that the administra­tion will help in rebuilding key facilities to be “more resilient” to withstand future natural disasters.

“We know that these communitie­s could be cash strapped and we want to get that funding flowing,” Criswell added.

Biden approved a disaster declaratio­n for the state, which frees up federal funds for temporary housing, home repairs and loans to cover uninsured property losses. But there’s concern that inflation and economic troubles may blunt the impact of federal assistance.

The president arrived in the Delta community as a new series of severe storms threatens to rip across the Midwest and the South.

According to a new study, the U.S. will see more of these massive storms as the world warms. The storms are likely to strike more frequently in more populous Southern states including Alabama, Mississipp­i and Tennessee.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP ?? President Joe Biden speaks with members of the media after a briefing in Rolling Fork, Miss., Friday. Biden traveled to Rolling Fork to survey the damage after a deadly tornado and severe storm moved through the area. Mississipp­i Gov. Tate Reeves is second from left.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP President Joe Biden speaks with members of the media after a briefing in Rolling Fork, Miss., Friday. Biden traveled to Rolling Fork to survey the damage after a deadly tornado and severe storm moved through the area. Mississipp­i Gov. Tate Reeves is second from left.

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