Towns offer blueprint for Joplin to rebuild

Phillip Law, left, and Darren Collins frame a wall Thursday as they rebuild a destroyed beauty salon in Joplin. Collins, a general contractor married to the shop's owner, planned to have the project finished in 45 days. As Joplin struggles to recover from an EF5 tornado that hit Sunday, the city has a few towns to look to that have gone before and rebuilt after tornadoes.
Phillip Law, left, and Darren Collins frame a wall Thursday as they rebuild a destroyed beauty salon in Joplin. Collins, a general contractor married to the shop's owner, planned to have the project finished in 45 days. As Joplin struggles to recover from an EF5 tornado that hit Sunday, the city has a few towns to look to that have gone before and rebuilt after tornadoes.

JOPLIN (AP) - Less than a week after one of the nation's deadliest tornadoes wiped a big chunk of Joplin off the map, the city is beginning to shift its focus toward the next challenge: rising from the ruins. And the town that gained fame as a stop along Route 66 can use the road maps drawn by other storm-savaged communities that have endured the same long journey.

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Greg Solomon and Lauren Weintraub

Not far from Joplin, tiny Pierce City and Stockton rebuilt piece by piece after tornadoes reduced much of their prized downtowns to rubble, killing four. Greensburg, Kan., did the same, starting over after a 2007 twister leveled the town and killed 11.

The rebirths took years of hard work, partnerships and plain old stubborn faith. Some of the projects are still unfolding. Yet they offer a hopeful testament about beginning anew after a disaster, even if the other towns didn't face the scale of death and decimation rendered by Sunday's tornado that killed at least 126 and by some estimates left more than 900 injured.

Joplin's half-mile-wide twister took out the city's main hospital, the high school and possibly thousands of homes. One of the Walmarts was flattened, along with the Home Depot. Hundreds of businesses and industrial buildings were lost. And an untold number of vehicles - from cars to tractor-trailers, even a hospital helicopter - were mangled.

City Manager Mark Rohr said planners are already plotting a comeback, vowing Joplin "will recover stronger than when we began."

Federal aid will help.

President Barack Obama has declared disasters in Jasper and Newton counties, and a key House panel has approved a $1 billion aid package to make sure federal disaster-relief accounts don't run out before the end of the budget year in September.

Rep. Robert Aderholt, an Alabama Republican, said the move would ensure there's enough money for victims of the Joplin tornado, as well as those suffering from flooding along the Mississippi River and last month's twisters that swept across Alabama.

A day after Joplin was crippled, Republican House Majority Leader Eric Cantor told reporters any federal aid to disaster areas may need to be offset by spending cuts. But Sen. Roy Blunt, a Missouri Republican, vowed to make sure Joplin gets all it needs.

Funding questions aside, former Joplin Mayor Ron Richard, now a state senator, was a bit more cautious than Rohr in his vision for the immediate future.

"I wouldn't consider this an economic-development opportunity. This is just survival," Richard said. "We're just going to have to get back to where we were - as close as we can would be the goal. I'm not sure how much time it's going to take."

Julie Johnson felt that way about Pierce City on May 4, 2003, when tornadoes marched into Jasper County on the Missouri-Kansas line and cut a swath east across the state. When the fury had passed, 18 people were dead and some 70,000 structures were damaged or destroyed over 76 counties.

The twister killed a man when the National Guard Armory where many were seeking shelter partly collapsed.

Pierce City, a town of 1,260 people some 35 miles southeast of Joplin, lost more than 80 homes and all but three of its businesses. A nine-block area of its historic downtown was wiped out. The district was once replete with antique shops and eateries housed in buildings that dated to the 1800s.

The city hall, fire station, library and senior center? Gone, along with the grocery store, two convenience shops, the pharmacy and the hardware store.

"We had a lot of historic stuff, two full blocks of historic, beautiful buildings. Only three managed to make it through," said Johnson, the city clerk.

But Pierce City pressed on. A new $4.7 million armory opened on the city's south side, replacing the old building, which now houses a mental-health center. The city got a new firehouse, a City Hall that's a $450,000 replica of an old train depot, and things local leaders never dreamed of having - a Dollar General store, two strip malls and storm shelters at the fire station and at the schools.

"Some things came back bigger and better," said Johnson, who has spent all but four of her 48 years in Pierce City, where the population is down just 128 from a decade ago. "It's never going to be the way it was as far as physical attributes, and we lost the historical charm as far as downtown. But we're back."

So is Stockton, eight years after the lakeside town was brought to its knees by the tornado that killed three people, nearly destroyed the town square and knocked out one-third of its 120 businesses. Hundreds of homes were damaged or destroyed, and the park was obliterated.

Residents wanted to start rebuilding immediately, Mayor Patty Thompson recalls. But the city council barred new construction for a few months, allowing for cool reflection about how the resurrected town should look.

Now, Thompson said, Stockton has a "whole new downtown," its buildings fashioned of dark brick. The community center, about the only thing salvaged from the tornado, has been rehabbed. Trees have been replanted. Residents appear to like it. The population of 1,819 is down just 141 from 2000.

"I'm really proud of how this community pulled together and went forward," said Thompson, 65, a waitress at a Mexican restaurant. "A lot of people could have just moved away and said forget it. But we've just got a beautiful little city."

Scars remain: Some sidewalks buckled by the tornado still need replacing. Replanted trees in the park can only grow so fast, and saplings are being planted in the once-devastated cemetery.

Still, she said, "In eight years, you can say, "Look at how far we've come. We can overcome.'"

Both cities had big-time help. The federal government extended a rare offer to assist with long-term recovery, offering a package that included developing a plan for rebuilding, as well as appointing a project manager to seek out private and government assistance. The Federal Emergency Management Agency eventually doled out millions of dollars in grants to both communities.

In southern Kansas, Greensburg was a town of about 1,500 with a declining population before a tornado roared through in May 2007, destroying 90 percent of the town in winds topping 200 mph.

At the time, Steve Hewitt was a 33-year-old, first-time city manager on the job for only a year. He said the town approached rebuilding as an opportunity and, like Stockton, took some time to think about it.

Greensburg brought in planning consultants from a big city, held community meetings, reworked some zoning ordinances and literally shuffled the town. The school was rebuilt at a different site. City Hall was rebuilt on land that once was a car dealership, which relocated to a higher-traffic spot. And Greensburg rose up as a model green community - more environmentally friendly than it ever had been, including a $50 million school with geothermal systems that rely on the Earth's heat for warmth in the winter and cooling in the summer.

Even so, the recovery is far from total. According to the 2010 census, Greenburg's population of nearly 800 is barely half of what it was a decade ago, as is the number of businesses. Yet to be rebuilt are the town's pharmacy, variety store and movie theater.