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| ENTERPRISE, Ala. - On a mournful mission, President Bush climbed over piles of concrete, roofing, insulation, broken glass and textbooks Saturday that littered Enterprise High School, battered by a tornado that killed eight students.
Down hallway three, lined by blue lockers, he went in private, the corridor where the students died and scores more were trapped in Thursday's storm. The president also saw the wing _ now just rubble _ where students had hunkered down as the tornado approached. "Today I have walked through devastation that is hard to describe," he said, standing with students, one of whom had a tear running down her face. "Our thoughts go out to the students who perished. Thank God for hundreds who lived," he said. "These are very tough times for the people here," Bush said. "Out of this rubble will emerge a better tomorrow." Before visiting the school, he got a bird's-eye view of the tornado damage in this town of 22,000 in Alabama's southeastern corner as his Marine One helicopter followed the storm's extensive path. "You can never heal a heart, but you can provide comfort knowing that the federal government will provide help for those whose houses were destroyed or automobiles were destroyed," the president told Mayor Kenneth Boswell after the aerial tour. Bush designated Coffee County as a disaster area, releasing millions of dollars in federal aid for recovery and individual assistance. "This storm was a tough storm. It went eight miles and affected a lot of lives," Bush said at the Enterprise Municipal Airport. "This country is a prayerful country. There are a lot of people praying for you." Journeying to the South "with a heavy heart," the president told the mayor and other local officials, "I will try to the best of my ability to help those who lost life and property." From the air, Bush got a panoramic look at the devastation across this town. More than 30 tornadoes killed at least 20 people across the Midwest and Southeast on Thursday. While in the helicopter that tracked the Enterprise storm's path, Bush saw trees without tops, roofs pockmarked by holes and debris strewn everywhere. Next to some wrecked homes were others untouched by the tornado. The town's white water tower _ with the words "Enterprise, City of Progress" _ stood tall. But nearby, Enterprise High School looked like a wrecked ball had struck it. Bush made a public appeal for contributions to the American Red Cross and other relief organizations. "If you feel the generosity in your heart to help people affected by this terrible tornado, I would ask you to contribute," he said. Bush scheduled the trip to highlight his administration's stepped-up efforts, through the Federal Emergency Agency in particular, to help victims. "That's the new FEMA," the agency's director, R. David Paulison, told reporters aboard Air Force One during the flight from Washington. The White House and the disaster relief agency came under severe criticism for the government's sluggish response to the Gulf Coast hurricanes that tore through Louisiana and Mississippi in 2005. "With the system we used in the past, we were waiting for a local community to become overwhelmed before the state steps in and waiting for the state to become overwhelmed before the federal government steps in," Paulson said. "That doesn't work. We have to go in as partners." Paulison said he was on the telephone with state emergency officials hours after the storms hit. Agency teams have nearly completed preliminary damage assessments in Alabama and planned to begin similar work in Georgia on Saturday, he said. Paulison said FEMA had moved in truckloads of water, ice, tarps, plastic sheeting and communications equipment to help the states take care of residents. It was not immediately clear what areas besides Coffee County will be eligible for federal disaster aid. Paulson said he wanted to see the damage firsthand so he could make a quick recommendation to Bush on requests for assistance from Washington. "That's the main priority," he said. "Is the damage significant enough that it overwhelms the local and state capabilities to handle it without federal assistance?" More than 50 others were injured in Enterprise. The mayor said about 370 homes were damaged or destroyed. School officials had ordered students into interior halls _ supposedly the safest part of the building. Many of the 1,200 students had left school after the initial warnings, and administrators decided to dismiss classes before the worst of the weather was forecast to hit. But with hundreds of students still huddled inside the school, emergency management officials warned that a tornado may hit the area and advised school officials to keep holding students. A wall in one hall collapsed, and the concrete slab roof fell on the victims. School officials said they did not have time to evacuate earlier because of the approaching storm. Some said the death toll would have been greater if students had been outside or on the road when the storm arrived. Gov. Bob Riley defended administrators' actions. After touring Enterprise, Bush planned to visit Americus, Ga., about 120 miles south of Atlanta, to be briefed on the damage there and meet with some of the town's 17,000 residents. Storms in Americus killed two people and destroyed dozens of homes and businesses. |
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All I can say is wow... I remember back when I was in school we would joke about the school blowing up and stuff but we were only messing around.
This is seriouse stuff. I am really glad that the school staff had the right idea of evavuating the building. This is devistating.
We had a Hurricane hit Nova Scotia a few years back and nobody was ready. The Whole province was devistated, then again we never get them... but then again... never say never. We were not prepaired.
