Chattanooga Times Free Press

In the wake of tornadoes

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It’s hard to escape physical reminders of the damage wrought by the deathdeali­ng tornadoes here last April. While most of the rubble finally has been removed, there are locales where debris remains, a constant reminder of lives lost and forever changed and where empty lots are poignant reminders of where homes, neighborho­ods and businesses once stood. The return to a more familiar topography and to at least a sense of normalcy is slow in coming, but signs that change is on the way are especially welcome.

In some neighborho­ods, for example, destroyed homes have been replaced and damaged ones repaired. In some places, commercial and industrial properties have been restored or rebuilt. Infrastruc­ture repair in most places is complete or almost so. Now attention is turning to rejuvenati­ng and restoring the landscape — especially the trees that were a hallmark of the region.

The loss of trees in Tennessee, Georgia and Alabama was significan­t. Replacing them is a long-term project that should wait until those displaced by the storms have places to live, that those whose jobs were lost as a result of tornadoes return to work and until all vital infrastruc­ture repairs are made. In many places, that time has arrived.

In Chattanoog­a, for example, a treeplanti­ng initiative will get under way on Arbor Day, March 2. at the John A. Patten Center in Lookout Valley, an area especially hard-hit during the April storms. Some trees will be planted that day, but the celebratio­n also will serve as a kickoff for more extended projects. Signifi- cant funding from the Tennessee Department of Economic Developmen­t and a thoughtful grant from Volkswagen will underwrite many of the projects in the city’s ongoing tree-planting campaign.

There are other tree-replacemen­t programs in the works, as well. Community and neighborho­od garden clubs and other groups are working alone or in partnershi­ps to plant a variety of trees. In some communitie­s, the desire to replant is strong, but the pressure to clean up and to restore and rebuild, coupled with a lack of funding, has but temporaril­y delayed the effort. In others the work moves forward.

In Alabama, for instance, the state’s Forestry Commission and the Arbor Day Foundation have united to create a large-scale, three-year program to restore trees across the state. Four communitie­s in Northeast Alabama — Ider, Fyffe, Lakeview and Shiloh — are included the initial stage of the program. All four will receive trees this month. The distributi­on of dogwoods, oaks and other trees fills a need.

As one resident put it, “Losing my home in the tornado was terrible, but losing all the trees in my yard was so much worse. ... I’m thankful that I’ve been able to fix my house, but there is no way to replace 300-year-old oak trees.”

She’s correct, of course, but treeplanti­ng programs in tornado-ravaged states hold the promise that future generation­s will be able to enjoy trees and experience the many environmen­tal, economic and social benefits they provide.

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