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General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: apl68 on June 21, 2023, 07:52:49 AM

Title: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: apl68 on June 21, 2023, 07:52:49 AM
We had a storm on Sunday morning that blacked out our entire town.  I was visiting family elsewhere in the state when it happened.  Where I was we had the most violent thunderstorm that any of us could recall.  It banged and flashed for literally hours on end.  We lost power where I was staying for some hours.  But the outages didn't seem widespread, there was little evidence of storm damage when we went to church, and power was restored by late afternoon.  It looked like the storm had more bark than bite.  I didn't seen any damage on the two-hour drive home.

Then I got home and saw the whole town blacked out.  Next morning I scouted around by foot and bicycle.  We had multiple streets blocked and lines down due to fallen trees.  Our pastor told me about when the power had gone out.  Another church member said that he had heard that we might not have power restored for some days.  I saw some of Main Street back up and running by late morning. 

My house had power restored some time after five.  Since our block has a history of being one of the last places to have power restored after previous outages, I figured that things were getting back to normal.  A final bicycle round before dark indicated that this was not the case.  Our block seemed to be one of the few places that did have power.  There were generators rattling away everywhere else.  Our library was also still blacked out.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: apl68 on June 21, 2023, 08:01:12 AM
Yesterday morning, I met our assistant director at the library.  It was still blacked out.  She had power at her house, but told me that some other staff members were still blacked out.  Since we couldn't operate with no power, we posted signs on the building explaining why we were closed, and posted about it on social media.

I bicycled downtown to check at the Mayor's office.  I was startled to find that the street lights were about the only thing running downtown.  The Mayor's office was shut down without even a portable generator.  The newspaper office across the street did have one.  They were putting together the next issue in hopes that they would have power restored later in the day to run the press.

The Chamber of Commerce seemed to be the only place downtown that had normal power.  I asked the director about relief efforts.  She said that the county Baptist Association would do a meal distribution early that evening.  Another church was doing something similar elsewhere.  And the local food pantry had just received an emergency shipment from the food bank in Little Rock.

I went to the food pantry and spent a while helping them bag up the new supplies.  Then I went home and raked up minor storm debris from my elderly next door neighbors' yard.  Around five I cycled to the library and found that the power there was now on.  I notified the staff that we'd be back on the job in the morning. 

Then I cycled to the church where the county Baptist Association was distributing meals.  The director there told me that they'd distributed 500 meals the previous evening in the county seat, which was in worse shape than we were.  Tuesday evening they were distributing another 500 in our town.  Wednesday they had plans to distribute meals at another blacked-out town in the region.  Also on Wednesday, the Arkansas Baptist Association, which in recent years has become a major natural disaster relief organization in Arkansas and neighboring states (Heaven knows disasters have become common enough in recent years), was bringing its mobile kitchen to the county seat.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: apl68 on June 21, 2023, 08:05:48 AM
As of yesterday evening and this morning our downtown and most residential neighborhoods seem to have power restored.  But there are still a number of residential blocks blacked out.  We're still having internet issues at the library.  It's sort of working now.

I haven't heard anything from colleagues in the county seat.  I assume that they can't open.  Probably none of our county offices can.  A staff member who lives there was not able to come in today.  I heard this morning that the storm wrecked a substation, and that that part of the county will be lucky to have power restored by Friday.

We had other storms and a tornado elsewhere in the state.  The Governor has declared a state of emergency in the affected areas.  We've had no reports of anybody injured locally.  Trees did fall on several residences, but they were mostly vacant at the time.  We're thankful that there's been no loss of life.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: Morden on June 21, 2023, 08:41:29 AM
My best wishes for your town and county.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: namazu on June 21, 2023, 10:09:03 PM
I'm relieved to hear that there was no loss of life.  I hope your library and the area it serves will recover (relatively) quickly.  Wishing you all the best.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: lightning on June 22, 2023, 06:44:05 AM
I'm glad to see that there is an organization that can provide some semblance of civilization, while infrastructure gets restored.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: Langue_doc on June 22, 2023, 06:54:59 AM
apl68, I'm sorry to hear about the situation in your community. Hope the state and county officials know what resources are needed. I've been in a couple of disaster situations and had no electricity for about 10 days and no internet for about a couple of weeks in the aftermath of one event. Hang in there, sending you good wishes that things get back to normal soon.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: Wahoo Redux on June 22, 2023, 07:47:01 AM
Thoughts and prayers, appl.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: apl68 on June 22, 2023, 08:40:47 AM
Thanks for the thoughts and prayers, everybody!  As of this morning we still had a few blocks near my house without power.  The line crews are down the alleys working on it.  Meanwhile, in the county seat, they've been trying to put the local substation back together.  It took a couple of days of all hands on deck just to clear the site.  It looks like the damage wasn't as severe as it could have been.  Most of the town is back on now.

A staff member who lives there said that the entire town was indeed down for days.  One convenience store had a generator so that they could pump gas and make some ice available.  The grocery store got running long enough to encourage people to come and buy as much of their stock as they could before they lost it.  And that was all that town had going!  There was much competition for available generators.  Our local hospital has good stand-by generators and was able to stay in operation.

Two guys at our church who work for the regional phone/internet company said that they'd been working long days.  Their internet service at our library is out.  The other service provider is somewhat running.  It costs us a fortune to have lines with two internet providers, but they're both so unreliable that we're reluctant to rely on one or the other exclusively.

City crews and volunteers have been busy clearing streets and roads.  One thing about living in a timber-producing regions--you've got plenty of locals who have chain saws and know how to use them!  The city paper did get full power restored in time to print the paper.  Storm damage pictures galore, plus a request from the Mayor that people keep fallen trees and branches separate from other types of debris, so that the city could collect them separately for environmental reasons.  Not sure what the Baptist Association is doing today, but since I haven't been able to get anybody at their office I'm guessing they're in the field working on something.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: Harlow2 on June 22, 2023, 09:59:59 AM
Sounds like real progress, APL. Hope the remaining disruption ends quickly.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: EdnaMode on June 22, 2023, 11:20:41 AM
Glad they seem to be making some progress. As someone who lived for ten years in a hurricane zone, and went through several ice storms and tornadoes when I lived in the southern midwest, I can empathize with the havoc mother nature can wreak. Hope things continue on the upswing.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: apl68 on June 22, 2023, 11:31:22 AM
Just got back from the weekly lunchtime meeting of the local Rotary Club.  Our guest today was the regional Salvation Army director.  Our town is too small to have a Salvation Army shelter or thrift store of its own.  We do have a long-established local Salvation Army effort that assists people with utility bills and such emergencies.  I didn't realize that the near(ish) city has an active shelter.  They serve quite a few transients passing through the region.  And they now serve meals by the thousand due to the recent rise in food insecurity.  They had been preparing to bring a mobile kitchen into this area to assist with our disaster, but it looks like the worst of the needs here are now winding up.

When the Major was done speaking, the Rotary member who had invited him spoke as well.  She has been the local Salvation Army point person for several years, and has been involved in a number of other service and relief efforts.  She commented on the generosity she has seen in our community, and noted that most of those in the room had given her money before for one or another of her projects.

Then she said something that most of us had not known.  I knew that she had once had a history of drug use, including at least one jail term.  I had not know that she spent some time homeless while living in another city in the state.  She had landed herself in that position due to drug use and other bad decisions.  She lived out of her car, until she no longer had one. 

She said that she remembered different people helping her during that time.  Some met her immediate physical needs.  And some gave her actual hope that encouraged her to look at getting out of the life she was in.  Which, after that jail term gave her a final wake-up call, she did.  She said that was why she was always hustling for money to help people out.  She said you never know when you might be the one to give somebody the hope they really need at that point.

We got more than we bargained for from the program today.  She's an amazing example of a life transformed by God.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: hmaria1609 on June 22, 2023, 05:11:27 PM
I'm sorry about what happened in your area! I'm glad you're (and your staff and neighbors) all right. Please keep us posted when you're able.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: paultuttle on June 24, 2023, 03:11:23 AM
Ditto. And I hope things keep looking up for you and your community.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: apl68 on June 24, 2023, 06:13:12 AM
As of yesterday the power seems to have been generally restored in all of our region's towns.  We seem to be pretty well back to normal.  There's still quite a bit of clean-up to be done here and there.

Thank you, everybody, for the expressions of support.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: paultuttle on June 28, 2023, 07:56:16 AM
I hope things are continuing to trend positively, apl68!
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: apl68 on June 28, 2023, 10:28:28 AM
Quote from: paultuttle on June 28, 2023, 07:56:16 AMI hope things are continuing to trend positively, apl68!

Thank you!

Yesterday's storm did no further damage that I'm aware of.  Everybody's a bit jumpy about storms after that recent experience, I think.  And we just keep getting them in the forecast!

Although we've had some level of disaster area declaration, local residents have so far been unable to access any sort of programs for their necessary residential damage claims.  There are a number of houses with serious roof damage.  Our church has already fixed the roof and cleaned up the yard at some members' house that was affected.  I'm hoping we can take care of some more fairly quickly through our county church association.  The Association is trying to start an outreach program to repair local residences over and beyond what churches do for their own members.  Our Chamber of Commerce director and I were discussing that this morning. 
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: apl68 on June 29, 2023, 11:55:39 AM
Today the Mayor spoke to the Rotary Club about the recent disaster response work by the city's staff.  She said that the head of Streets and Sanitation was out doing preliminary damage assessment before the winds had stopped blowing--which was also before five a.m. that morning.  There were two dozen houses damaged, and about sixty trees or parts of trees blocking streets.  City crews came in immediately to start clearing debris and reopening streets.

Since then they've hauled several hundred loads of storm debris.  A walk or drive around town will quickly indicate that the clean-up is still far from finished.  The city also worked with representatives from the electricity utility to try to make sure that nobody got overlooked when power was being restored.

The city also had to activate backup generators to keep city water and sewage systems running despite the power failure.  I could hear one of them running near my house for days.  Having the water remain on was a huge help during the days without power.

The Rotary Club then started taking pledges and making plans to hold a cookout for the city's crews next week as a way of saying thank-you.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: apl68 on July 12, 2023, 06:38:39 AM
We've had multiple violent storms come through since the one that knocked out all the power.  I know people must be holding their breath each time, afraid the grid is about to go down again.  It hasn't happened in town, but a couple of days ago a rural substation elsewhere in the county was wrecked and blacked out a substantial area.

A house a few blocks from where I live kept a generator running for weeks after the storm.  Evidently their meter and line were wrecked.  The house also has tarps on the roof from storm damage.  Yesterday I passed by and heard no generator noises.  I hope that means that their power is finally fixed.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: apl68 on July 17, 2023, 08:41:31 AM
And the hits just keep on coming.  Saturday I traveled to another town in some of the loveliest weather we've had so far this summer.  The forecast called for no rain until the following day either there or here.  Around supper time, we had a storm blow through where I was.  I got home afterward and found the town blacked out, in a repeat of what had happened a month ago.  This time the blackout wasn't as extensive.  My house came back on a little after midnight.  Some didn't get power back for a day or more. 

My block lost power a second time Sunday evening at the first breath of wind when another brief storm threatened.  There was no actual rain, so line crews were able to get us running yet again within a few hours.  Still getting reports of trees down and outages here and there around the region.

Meanwhile, we still have tarps on roofs here and there from last month's storm.  Earlier this year the county Baptist association received an anonymous donation of $40,000 to set up an outreach fund that area churches can access to help pay for improvements to needy households' residences.  The rules specify that the households must not be already church members, since a church will presumably prioritize taking care of its own members with its own resources.  Churches also have to supply an in-cash or in-kind match. 

I know people on the committee that administer the fund.  They say that the donor's idea in setting it up was specifically to encourage churches to reach out to people who are not churched.  Local churches are now starting to tap the fund to repair storm damage to neighbors' houses.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: apl68 on July 28, 2023, 07:28:24 AM
I learned yesterday that a local church has just gotten a roof replaced for a family who had no insurance to fix theirs after the storm.  The family said that their three-year-old was telling people that their house had been sick and was now better.

Still tarps on roofs here and there.  It takes a long time to set things right after a disaster--even a very small one like this.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: apl68 on July 31, 2023, 08:33:52 AM
This morning's total surprise storm thankfully seems to have done no damage in our town.  However, our nearest neighboring town is without power again.  A library staff member who lives there is off today dealing with that situation.  The rain will also presumably slow down the ongoing work of repairing storm-damaged roofs around the area.
Title: Re: Our County Is Now a Literal Disaster Area
Post by: apl68 on August 01, 2023, 07:12:08 AM
The power is now back on in the neighboring town.  And the roofers are back hard at work.  Our staff member who lost power said that it wasn't restored at her house until late last night.  That day off with no air conditioning can't have been fun.