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Many relied on word of mouth as communications continued to be difficult. "It's horrible. It's things you take for granted that aren't there anymore," said Jack Cleveland, 50, a Census Bureau worker. Lisa Smith, who has been Henryville's postmaster for six weeks, told people that they could pick up their mail in Scottsburg, about 10 miles north. A local insurance agent, Lyn Murphy-Carter, used paper and pen to gather handwritten claims from policyholders. In West Liberty, Ky., about 85 miles east of Lexington, the roar of chain saws filled the air as utility workers battled chilly weather and debris to get electricity restored to the battered town. Almost 19,000 customers were without power in Kentucky, according to the state's Public Service Commission, and a few thousand more from municipal utilities and TVA, which the PSC does not track. In Indiana, about 2,700 remained without power, down from 8,000 in the hours after the storms. But in some hard-hit areas, like Henryville, a substation and transmission lines need to be rebuilt, and that could take up to a week. Even with life upended in so many ways, one family got a reminder that a deadly tornado can't uproot everything. The home that Shalonda Kerr shares with her husband and Jack Russell terrier outside of Chelsea, Ind., was obliterated: The front wall was ripped clean, leaving the home looking eerily like a shaken dollhouse. An upended couch and a tipped-over fish tank lay in the rubble. The mailbox was untouched. Its front hatch was tipped open, revealing a white piece of paper. "Inside was a $300 IRS bill," Kerr said, laughing amid the ruins.
[Associated
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