Kentucky tornado death toll reaches 74, but only 8 at candle factory
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[December 14, 2021]
By Gabriella Borter
MAYFIELD, Ky. (Reuters) - The barrage of
tornadoes that tore through six states killed at least 74 people in
Kentucky, officials said on Monday, as those fortunate enough to survive
unscathed opened their doors to victims whose homes were destroyed, and
hundreds of the suddenly homeless took refuge in shelters.
The death toll was likely to rise as 109 people remained missing,
Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear said.
But no more dead were expected to come from a destroyed candle factory
as a company spokesperson said later that a final accounting showed only
eight dead. At one time, dozens were feared buried there beneath the
rubble.
Some 28,000 Kentucky homes and businesses still lacked power, and 1,000
homes were damaged or destroyed, officials said, after the tornadoes
surprised people by striking unusually late in the year during cold
weather on Friday.
The dead, including at least six children, ranged in age from 5 months
to 86 years old.
"You go from grief to shock to being resolute for a span of 10 minutes
and then you go back," Beshear said, choking up at times.
Amid the roller coaster of emotions, it has proven difficult for
authorities to pin down the exact death toll. Piles of wreckage,
interruptions to cell service and the number of people sheltering with
friends and relatives have complicated efforts to identify fatalities.
The final death toll from Mayfield's candle factory will stand at eight,
as the remaining 102 workers who were on duty when the tornado struck
are alive and have been accounted for, a process that took three days
given the chaos brought by the disaster, company spokesperson Bob
Ferguson said.
"Tremendous relief," Ferguson told Reuters. "And now there is a real
urgency to help those who lost their loved ones."
While Kentucky bore the brunt of the tornadoes, including one that tore
across tore across 227 miles (365 km) of terrain, six people died in an
Amazon.com Inc warehouse in Illinois, four were killed in Tennessee and
two in Missouri, while a nursing home was struck in Arkansas, causing
one of that state's two deaths.
The U.S workplace safety watchdog is investigating the circumstances
around the collapse of the Amazon facility, and the company said it
would cooperate.
Across Kentucky, neighbors and volunteers worked to house, feed and
offer any other assistance to those whose homes were damaged, destroyed
or stripped of electricity.
In the neighboring town of Wingo, about 90 people, from babies to the
elderly, are sleeping on green cots that fill a warehouse-like room with
low ceilings and a large standing cross at a community center affiliated
with a Presbyterian church.
Stephen Jennittie, 52, was staying there with his wife, Christie Bonds,
their Chihuahua puppy, Mr. Jingles, and about 90 other Mayfield
residents, since the power and heat were knocked out of their home.
Their survival felt like such a miracle that it renewed his religious
faith, Jennittie said, recalling how his house shook amid the rumbling
noise.
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A framed sign is seen in the foreground as Mr. Weatherbee stands
atop his family home in the aftermath of a tornado in Mayfield,
Kentucky, U.S., December 13, 2021. REUTERS/Adrees Latif
"I was talking to God and I told my lady, when we get out of here, we're
going to start going to church," said Jennittie, a seventh-generation
resident of Mayfield who said he may leave a devastated hometown that he
no longer recognizes.
"It ain't the Mayfield I grew up in."
'KIND OF IN DISBELIEF'
Homes across the town had collapsed walls, missing roofs and uprooted
trees scattered across lawns.
With so many homeless, the Wingo shelter was short on mattresses on
Saturday. But after one phone call, a local furniture store owner
brought in more than two dozen mattresses, said Meagan Ralph, 37, a
middle-school teacher who found herself appointed the community outreach
director when she showed up to volunteer over the weekend.
"Some of them are really shocked and just kind of in disbelief, almost
denial. For some, the emotion is unbearable," Ralph said.
President Joe Biden will attempt to raise spirits with a planned visit
on Wednesday to hard-hit areas including Mayfield, the White House said,
after the president declared a major federal disaster in Kentucky on
Sunday.
Late on Monday, the president also declared an emergency in Tennessee
and Illinois and approved federal assistance for the two states.
More than 300 people in Kentucky, as well as in Arkansas and Tennessee,
are being housed in Red Cross shelters, and that number is expected to
grow. Hundreds more have been placed temporarily in resorts at area
state parks, Kentucky Red Cross Chief Executive Steve Cunanan said.
Still others stayed with friends and relatives whose houses were spared.
David Hargrove, 62, surveyed the rubble that was once his private law
office in downtown Mayfield. Amid the debris, a vault that was built
into the 23-year-old building stood as the only part to remain upright.
He plans to rebuild.
"You either sit down and cry or you get moving," Hargrove said. "I'm not
much one to cry if I can avoid it."
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter in Mayfield, Kentucky; Additional
reporting by Peter Szekely and Tyler Clifford in New York, Brendan
O'Brien in Chicago, Susan Heavey in Washington, Dan Whitcomb in Los
Angeles and Rich McKay in Atlanta; additional reporting by Shivam Patel
in Bengaluru, Writing by Maria Caspani and Daniel Trotta; Editing by
Paul Thomasch, Lisa Shumaker and Peter Cooney)
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