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Volunteers Provide Food, Shelter For Storm Survivors In The South

Storms South Volunteers

JEFFREY COLLINS and MICHAEL KUNZELMAN   04/30/11 10:34 PM ET   AP

PRATT CITY, Ala. — Tornado victims in splintered Southern towns say volunteers are ensuring they're well-fed and warm at night, whether by refilling blood pressure medicine or patrolling neighborhoods in a grocery-filled pickup truck. At least a few, though, say they need more from the government: Help getting into their homes and cleaning up endless debris.

Across the twister-ravaged South, students and church groups aggressively tended to those who needed it most, clearing away wreckage and handing out food and water. Wednesday's tornadoes marked the second-deadliest day of twisters in U.S. history, leaving 342 people dead across seven states – including 250 in Alabama. Thousands were hurt, and hundreds of homes and businesses have vanished into rubble.

Federal Emergency Management Agency workers provided information to people in shelters about how to apply for help. National Guard soldiers stood watch, searched for survivors and helped sift through debris. Churches transformed into buzzing community hubs.

In Tuscaloosa, a Red Cross shelter was distributing clothes and providing counseling for folks like Carol Peck, 55, and her 77-year-old mother. She said the shelter's First Aid station even refilled her blood pressure pills without her having to ask.

She can't explain how it happened, but she suspects her clinic contacted the shelter.

"Evidently, because I sure didn't call," she said. "They knew I was here. I don't know how, but they found me."

In Ringgold, Ga., Poplar Springs Baptist Church had become an informal help center. Crews were dispatched from the church, some with chain saws to chop through the debris, others with bottled water and food. Inside the gymnasium, a barbecue buffet was feeding those without power.

"You've got elderly people out there who can't get out there and do it," said volunteer Kathleen Hensley, 40, of Ringgold. "They need a hand."

The University of Alabama's athletic department was pitching in around hard-hit Tuscaloosa, with more than 50 athletic training students giving Gatorade, bottled water and protein bars to residents.

"Anything they have to give athletes, they're giving away," said Jenny Sanders, one of the volunteers.

And most were grateful to get whatever they could.

Niki Eberhart, whose home in the Alberta City neighborhood of Tuscaloosa was shredded by the tornado, said Saturday that her husband and two children are getting everything they need at the shelter. And it isn't the first time they've counted on the Red Cross. When their home in Meridian, Miss., burned down last year in an electrical fire, Eberhart said the Red Cross responded within an hour.

"We feel like we've been blessed," she said. "Both times it could have been much worse. We lost things. Material possessions can be replaced."

Eberhart and her husband, Shane, also had already gotten help from FEMA workers at the shelter. And while they waited for a response from the federal government, Eberhart dismissed relatives' offers of sympathy.

"I told them we're having great luck because it could have been so much worse," she said. "If you don't have any bad times, how are you going to appreciate the good times?"

As some tried to clear the rubble and sort through belongings, others took on the task of burying the dozens who died. Several funerals were being held in Rainsville in northeastern Alabama, including services for 70-year-old Hubert Whooten, his 70-year-old wife, Juanita, and her mother, Lethel Izell, 86.

"They were just normal, hardworking country folk," family friend Kevin Black said outside the Rainsville Funeral Home. "If they seen you, they're gonna call you by your name and (ask), `How're you doing?' That's how it is around here."

But planning funerals was a struggle for many as they dealt with destroyed homes. There were also 35 deaths in Mississippi, 34 in Tennessee, 15 in Georgia, five in Virginia, two in Louisiana and one in Kentucky.

"A few of the families I met with, they've lost everything," said Jason Wyatt, manager of Tuscaloosa Memorial Chapel. "It's hard for me to hold my composure. They don't have clothing or anything."

Clarence Plump's wife was among those who died when the tornadoes hit Tuscaloosa. The 36-year-old steel worker said his wife was a loving person who would go out of her way to help others. He was rummaging through his family's possessions Saturday and found a few photos and little bicycles he put on a flatbed trailer hooked to his truck.

"Right now I'm just trying to straighten out my family and get back on track," he said.

Many residents still couldn't even get into the town of Cordova, Ala., where soldiers cordoned off the few roads that weren't left impassable by fallen trees. The school, one of the few buildings to survive the twister, was buzzing on Saturday. Students stuffed baskets full of lunches at the cafeteria while their parents sorted supplies across the hall.

Landmarks in the town northwest of Birmingham had been obliterated.

"I knew it was bad. But pictures don't begin to describe it," said 19-year-old college student Rachel Mitchell as she drove through town. "This is really hard. This is where I grew up and now nothing is here that I remember."

Still, frustration reigned for some. Eugene Starks, 82, worked with a tow truck driver Saturday to salvage a blown-out car from what was left of his garage in Pratt City, a blue-collar suburb of Birmingham. He said he was grateful to have survived the storm – "I give God credit" – but he needed more help recovering belongings from his home.

"I'm trying to do what I can myself," he said. "I hope the government steps in, but I'm not holding my breath."

On the outskirts of Phil Campbell in northwestern Alabama, 44-year-old Nickey Hughes was left to protect the rubble of his mobile home in a family-size tent he was sharing with his three grandchildren. He hasn't been able to find a shelter or a vacant hotel, so he's staying in the tent to scare off would-be looters.

"I've got help. I've got food and water. But I have no place to go," Hughes said. "I'm living it a day at a time, and that is getting to me."

Gov. Robert Bentley had dispatched 2,000 National Guard troops around Alabama to help residents and keep the peace. Many blocked off roads or patrolled neighborhoods to keep away gawkers and looters. Others helped residents sift through their shattered homes.

Carletta Wooley, 27, was going through some of her belongings in Holt, a community just outside Tuscaloosa. A pile of her family's belongings stood at the foot of a tree – a mirror, some hats, a pillow, a stereo. One of the soldiers picked up a photograph and handed it to her – it was of her son, when he was a baby.

"I'm going to cry," she said. "Thank you."

___

Collins reported from Phil Campbell, Ala. Associated Press writers Greg Bluestein in Cordova, Christopher Hawley and Michael Rubinkam in Rainsville, John Christofferson in Tuscaloosa and Ray Henry in Ringgold, Ga., contributed to this report.

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PRATT CITY, Ala. — Tornado victims in splintered Southern towns say volunteers are ensuring they're well-fed and warm at night, whether by refilling blood pressure medicine or patrolling neighbo...
PRATT CITY, Ala. — Tornado victims in splintered Southern towns say volunteers are ensuring they're well-fed and warm at night, whether by refilling blood pressure medicine or patrolling neighbo...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlueZoo
Independent voter, Independent thinker!
06:59 PM on 05/01/2011
If you've seen even a fraction of the televised news coverage re the tornado devastation, you've seen what real Americans do in times like this. Nobody asks what religion, race or political party you are. People just volunteer and set about helping their fellow man. It is a joy to see and read about! We're really good people here in this country and we need to remember that!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nancy J Powell
very left liberal
05:04 PM on 05/01/2011
Maybe the South should be more careful what they say about Obama!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nancy J Powell
very left liberal
05:02 PM on 05/01/2011
Will the republican religious right get the hint?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johnb123
All I ask..just be reasonable....do things my way
04:34 PM on 05/01/2011
I bet if this happened in Afghanistan, our governement would be pouring billions into the area.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
johnb123
All I ask..just be reasonable....do things my way
04:31 PM on 05/01/2011
Where are Wall St, the banks and the politicians? Are they donating anything?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gitrdone
04:04 PM on 05/01/2011
I wonder why the media was so quick not to blame this on climate change? On top of that, they ignored all the climate scientists who said it would be irresponsible not to mention the degree to which climate change might play a role.

http://ecocentric.blogs.time.com/2011/04/28/the-hows-and-whys-of-a-possibly-record-breaking-tornado-month/
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
1088
04:02 PM on 05/01/2011
FEMA is doing a good job! Thank you President Obama!!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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03:15 PM on 05/01/2011
Here's an idea: instead of spending another trillion dollars on the military psycho-narcissism complex. Let's devote our resources to making life better right here in the good 'ol USA
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dan1902
United we bargain,divided we beg!
03:10 PM on 05/01/2011
SOCIALISM TO THE RESCUE!!
lawgrrl
I feel like I am in a whirlwind of stupid!
04:05 PM on 05/01/2011
I don't want to be insensitive to devastation and sufffering, but my first thought in reading this was "do the people who are republicans and tea-partiers receiving assistance in this disaster realize it's the FEDERAL GOVERNMENT that is helping them out"?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dan1902
United we bargain,divided we beg!
04:29 PM on 05/01/2011
My point exactly!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DMDAY44
04:39 PM on 05/01/2011
The article indicated that most of the help was coming from volunteers and the state Govt.
smilingasa
I am a truth teller and a boat rocker
02:51 PM on 05/01/2011
Hey Republicans, you still don't want BIG GOVERNMENT?

I WANT BIG GOVERNMENT and I am paying my taxes because when Chit happens I am calling on BIG GOVERNMENT to help out!
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JessWonderin
03:36 PM on 05/01/2011
X2!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Captai
Get out while you still can!!
02:35 PM on 05/01/2011
At least a few, though, say they need more from the government: Help getting into their homes and cleaning up endless debris.

Time for some of that good old bootstrapin'.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
restarea
04:50 PM on 05/01/2011
I'm not clear on what you're saying here. Are you saying that these storm victims--many who have lost all of their material posessions in the span of minutes-- need to pull themselves up by their bootstraps and quit asking for help from their government? Or are you saying that their government needs to rise to the occasion and fulfill its moral and civic obligation by aidiing the recovery efforts with more action and resolve?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Majestry
04:58 PM on 05/01/2011
He's saying that the people who preach that others should pick themselves up by their own bootstraps should practice what they preach and not mooch off the government.
03:50 PM on 05/04/2011
When a group of people say that those who get government help are generally moochers and tax dodgers and don't deserve 'my taxes paying for their lives' yes, I think that is about the right interpretation. Either you approve of government helping people, or you don't.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SnapShots
Ignorance is not a virtue.
02:22 PM on 05/01/2011
Naysayers will deny climate change until a storm picks them up and carries them away. And not even then, because at that moment it becomes The Rapture.
02:18 PM on 05/01/2011
When I lost everything I owned in Hurricane Katrina, the first people who arrived to help my neighborhood were the members of a Baptist church from a neighboring state - not the government or any "official" agency. They showed up & immediately began cooking food, organizing tons of supplies they brought with them & setting up rows of washing machines & dryers. For weeks, these kind-hearted people fed us, helped us clean our homes & businesses & did endless loads of laundry. The highlight of our otherwise depressing existence was going to the church relief center every day & talking to the friendly folks there & having a hot meal. Nobody cared or talked about religion or politics or anything else. All we were worried about was how we could help each other through a terrible crisis.
02:57 PM on 05/01/2011
Thanks for sharing. I know of several teams from our area that helped in Jefferson Parish.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
trouble4
Independent because I can think for myself
04:46 PM on 05/01/2011
Several volunteers from my area went into the Gulf states with semi trailers loaded with supplies, water, food and equipment.

From people who are on here bashing, one only has to wonder if their neighboring communities and states would help out in that way, if they were hit with a similar disaster.
My guess is no, since they seem to believe the government should do it for them.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:08 PM on 05/01/2011
http://www.vimeo.com/22570004?ab

just saw this on another site, i pray this is Not the truth....i'm speechless. :(
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
goldgoose
loose as whatever
02:07 PM on 05/01/2011
My fellow Americans: It is now time for all of us (including the President and Congress) to admit that America cannot afford war and be able to provide assistance for our own peoples natural tragedies like floods, tornadoes, and earthquakes; now is the time to withdraw from Afghanistan, Iraq, Columbia, and Libya and let other people fight for their own liberty. It is easy to withdraw and we have a historic example of how to withdraw, Vietnam; you just load up the troops on helicopters and get the hell out as fast and quick as possible. Hallelujah! Big cut in the national debt.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
trouble4
Independent because I can think for myself
04:48 PM on 05/01/2011
Many of us have been saying that for years. Perhaps the only way they will get the message in Washington is if we threaten to vote them out unless they finally listen to the people who they are supposed to be working for instead of the lobbyists.