Tornado-safe rooms shielded students in Carlisle, Arkansas, from storm
last week
Gov. Mike Beebe urges schools statewide to use funds to build safe rooms
State law does not require schools to install safe tornado-safe rooms
CARLISLE, Arkansas (AP) -- Just before the tornado sirens sounded,
school superintendent Floyd Marshall got the warning from police -- a
twister was coming right for the town's elementary and high school.
But Marshall had a weapon of his own: Unlike most other schools in
Arkansas, the two Carlisle schools have specially designed interior
hallways -- dubbed tornado-safe rooms -- where 750 students cowered
until the storms passed by Friday.
"You may never need it, but that one time that you do that you don't
have it, it's something you can't recover from," Marshall said.
The tornado eventually veered away from the shared campus of the
schools at the last moment, but Gov. Mike Beebe acknowledged the
importance of the rooms on a visit to the city Monday.
"I'd like to see them everywhere. I'd like to see them as much as
possible," Beebe said. "But at this juncture, we're not in a position
to mandate them everywhere, unless you have the money to be able to
give them to everybody."
Julie Thompson, a spokeswoman for the Arkansas Department of Education,
acknowledged that many schools throughout the state do not have the
safe rooms. She said officials do not keep a count of how many schools
have them.
State law requires schools to hold tornado drills no less than four
times per year during the months of September, October, January and
February. However, state laws only suggest building the safe rooms.
But the state Legislature has set aside $456 million for a program to
build and repair crumbling schools across Arkansas. Beebe said
districts in line for the funding likely could use that money, or money
set aside in federal government grants, to build the safe rooms.
"It doesn't take a lot of encouragement because most of the school
officials have been really conscious and proactive about building
either safe rooms or hardened areas of their school buildings," Beebe
said.
Most of the storms, which meteorologists now say included 11 confirmed
tornadoes, came Friday morning while schools were in session. That's
unusual because afternoon and evening storms often offer the best
conditions for tornados to form. Watch Arkansas residents clean up the
aftermath of the storm »
The storms killed seven people in Arkansas. Beebe and other state
officials flew by helicopter to see damage Monday in Carlisle, Earle
and Greers Ferry. The governor recounted seeing a pontoon boat wrapped
around a tree and other devastation on his trip.
Maj. Gen. Bill Wofford, commander of the Arkansas National Guard, said
about 60 guard members remained on duty Monday in tornado-damaged
areas. He said the Guard would begin a slow drawdown Wednesday as
police take over security.
Meanwhile, officials continue to assess damage throughout the state
since an outbreak of severe weather began February 5, said David
Maxwell, director of the Arkansas Department of Emergency Management.
As floodwaters continue to recede in eastern Arkansas and the
possibility of more storms loom later in the week, Maxwell acknowledged
a final tally of the destruction remains elusive.
"The expenses will go on for months and months and months," he said.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Arkansas governor urges schools to build safe rooms
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