The Oklahoman

Progress, housing woes a month after Ky. twisters

Cleanup, rebuilding are still in the early stages

- Bill Estep Lexington Herald-Leader TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

BOWLING GREEN, Ky. – There are still mounds of splintered wood and other debris piled along streets in several Kentucky cities pummeled by tornadoes nearly a month ago, but they are continuing to dig out and businesses are reopening.

In Bowling Green, for instance, the Beverly Hills Bargain Boutique was back in business Jan. 4 after being closed more than three weeks while power was being restored.

The clothing store had a blue plastic trap covering damage to the roof, but also a steady flow of customers.

It’s something of a metaphor for the recovery from the most deadly night of tornadoes in Kentucky history.

“I’m seeing everyday a little bit of improvemen­t,” said store owner John Horner.

Still, no one doubts that it will take a long time for a full recovery. How long is uncertain, and there is concern some places won’t make it all the way back.

A series of tornadoes that hit Kentucky on Dec. 10 and 11 damaged or destroyed thousands of homes and businesses and killed at least 77 people.

The heaviest damage was in Graves County, where a candle factory collapsed on workers in Mayfield; Warren County, where most of the deaths occurred on one street in Bowling Green; and in Dawson Springs and Bremen.

There were tornadoes confirmed in several other counties, however, including Boyle, Madison and Hardin, according to the National Weather Service.

The weather service counted a total of 20 tornadoes in the outbreak.

A month on, the work to clean up and build back is still in the early days.

There’s a mind-numbing amount of work for residents and officials – dealing with federal, non-profit and religious aid organizati­ons, filing claims for assistance, coordinati­ng volunteers, arranging to remove thousands of tons of debris, searching for equipment and figuring out housing for displaced people in cities where the rental market was tight even before hundreds of homes and apartments were wiped out.

“It has been the most difficult and stressful three weeks of my life,” said Jack Whitfield Jr., Hopkins County judge-executive.

Whitfield said just after the storm hit his county, causing 17 deaths, a judgeexecu­tive from an adjoining county rode around with him and answered his phones because he was getting so many calls.

The storm destroyed 302 homes and businesses in the county or damaged them beyond repair, and had at least some impact on a total of 900 structures, Whitfield said.

Whitfield said that left at least 780,000 cubic yards of debris to clean up. That volume of mulch would weigh nearly 200,000 tons.

Getting that debris cleared away has to be a priority to make way for rebuilding, officials in several counties said, and they are working on it.

As of Jan. 6, for instance, 83,952 cubic yards of debris had been hauled away in Bowling Green and another 17,539 in the county, said Travis Puckett, deputy emergency manager for the county.

“I think we’re making substantia­l progress,” he said.

Local officials across the region hit by the tornadoes said the work of volunteers, the American Red Cross, federal agencies, faith groups and companies had been invaluable in dealing with the tornadoes.

Some people would not have had the financial or physical ability to clean debris from their home sites and pile it for pickup without volunteer help, said Mike Buchanon, Warren County judgeexecu­tive.

Another key immediate need is housing.

Housing already was tight in Bowling Green and Warren County because of quick growth in recent years, and the tornadoes wiped out 500 houses and apartments and damaged another 500 so badly it will take months to fix them, Buchanon said.

The sheer volume of work will mean delays in getting contractor­s to fix houses and apartments.

“You can’t get a contractor right now,” Buchanon said.

Local officials estimate 5,000 or more residents in Bowling Green were displaced. They are living with family, friends or in motels, but some have had to go to Tennessee or Indiana to find a place to stay, Buchanon said.

Several local officials said there are discussion­s underway about how to provide long-term temporary housing for people displaced by the tornadoes.

One potential would be to hook trailers or recreation­al-type vehicles to utilities at sites where people used to live or in developmen­ts nearby, helping preserve those neighborho­ods while rebuilding goes on, officials said.

“If we can get ’em close to where they were that would be best,” Whitfield said.

Chasity Coleman lost everything when a tornado destroyed the home in Bowling Green she shared with her 5year-old son. They stayed with her mother and at a motel for more than three weeks while she searched for a new place to rent.

Several times she saw places advertised online, but when she called the were already gone, Coleman said.

She finally found a townhouse – for $200 a month more than her old rent – a few days ago.

“It’s so hard here because everyone is looking for a place at the same time,” said Coleman, a hair stylist.

Coleman said she was grateful that she and her son weren’t hurt, because so many people were injured or killed. For her, not having a permanent place to live was the hardest thing in the aftermath of the tornadoes.

“We’re just trying to get moved in and put the pieces back together,” she said.

Three tornadoes hit Bowling Green early Dec. 11, including one that wrecked scores of businesses along the busy 31W Bypass, a key business area in the city.

Seventeen people died as a result, and at least 84 were injured. There were likely other injuries that were not reported to authoritie­s, Puckett said.

Two local hospitals ran low on blood, Buchanon said.

Some other places hit by the tornadoes had a shortage of housing because they weren’t growing, so builders weren’t putting up many new houses or apartments.

Whitfield said Hopkins County and Dawson Springs lost population between the 2010 and 2020 census counts. He is concerned that without a quick housing solution, more people will leave.

“I’m worried about it,” he said.

 ?? ?? A house stands amid the rubble of homes destroyed by a December tornado in Cambridge Shores, Ky. CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES VIA TNS
A house stands amid the rubble of homes destroyed by a December tornado in Cambridge Shores, Ky. CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES VIA TNS

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