WEBB CITY, Mo. —
The Webb City School District has been awarded $6 million from the Federal Emergency Management Agency for the construction of three tornado safe rooms, including one that will be open to the public.
The district could receive as much as $9 million if two additional safe rooms under consideration are approved. The district’s share of the project would be about $2.5 million.
Superintendent Anthony Rossetti and his administrative team signed off on the grant contract Thursday in Jefferson City. It stipulates that the district has nine months to design and then 18 months to complete the project.
It will include a $3 million safe room at Webb City High School that will accommodate its 1,200 students as well as an additional 1,800 community members.
It also will include a safe room to be built between Harry S. and Bess Truman elementaries that will provide shelter to a combined 550 students, and most likely will include a safe room to be built between Madge T. James Kindergarten Center and Webster Elementary School, although Rossetti has not received final confirmation on the latter. Neither of those two shelters will be open to the public.
The district is waiting for confirmation on two additional shelters, one to be built at the junior high and one at the middle school.
“We still are confident the others will be approved,” Rossetti said.
The district’s other attendance centers were not included in the grant, which carries population requirements.
The announcement this week allows the district to proceed to the design phase, for which it sent out a request for proposals by architectural firms.
“We’re contemplating our financial resources and what that will allow us to do on this,” Rossetti said.
It’s likely, he said, that the safe rooms at the high school, junior high and middle school would be attached to the existing buildings and outfitted as multipurpose space so that they have dual value. Those at the elementary schools and primary center most likely would be stand-alone shelters, although they would be designed and landscaped to blend with the existing buildings and, in the future, might be converted to a dual use.
“We’re pretty excited,” Rossetti said. “This opens up all kinds of possibilities and opportunities.”
He anticipates breaking ground by the end of the school year or early summer.
Second grant
The grant is the second to be made by the Federal Emergency Management Agency in Webb City. In June, FEMA announced it will pay $1.1 million toward the cost of a 8,700-square-foot structure at Crowder College’s campus in Webb City, with Crowder picking up the remaining $383,000.
The safe room portion of the building will hold 1,375 people, including students, staff members and residents who live within a half-mile radius of the campus on South Ellis Street.
Local News
Webb City School District receives FEMA money for storm safe rooms
- Local News
-
-
Donations being accepted for Moore tornado survivors
Joplin residents and area nonprofit and relief organizations, remembering the devastation sustained two years ago in the Joplin tornado, are rallying today to send help to residents of Moore, Okla.
-
Hearing slated for Joplin East Middle School teacher set for Thursday
An East Middle School teacher who was removed from his classroom last month following an investigation by district officials will go before the Board of Education this week.
-
Catholic Charities puts out call for donations to fill two trucks for Oklahoma tornado survivors
Catholic Charities of Southern Missouri is requesting donations to fill two box trucks with needed supplies for the tornado-devastated region of Moore, Okla.
-
Crowder College president to head to MSSU
Alan Marble, who announced Monday that he would retire as president of Crowder College in June, has been hired as special assistant to the president at Missouri Southern State University, MSSU officials announced Tuesday.
-
Joplin sends team to help Moore
A team of public safety workers from Joplin were deployed Monday night to assist in Moore, Okla.
-
Globe reporter describes scene in Moore, Okla.
Joplin Globe Reporter Andra Stefanoni, on the ground in Moore, Okla., said the scene there is eerily reminiscent of Joplin on May 22, 2011.
-
Vandals cause $37,000 in damage at Joplin business
A Joplin business owner was the victim of a weekend vandalism spree that resulted in an estimated $37,000 in damages and theft, in addition to putting the company out of service for at least two days.
-
Storms cause damage throughout the Four States
Four-State Area residents hunkered down twice Monday to ride out tornadoes and powerful spring storms, then went to work cleaning up. The worst damage from Monday night’s storm was being reported in Ottawa County, Okla., near Wyandotte. That followed a report of an EF-1 tornado early Monday morning near Carthage.
-
Two plead guilty to post-tornado wire theft
Two defendants pleaded guilty Monday to stealing copper wire from utility poles in the wake of the May 22, 2011, tornado that struck Joplin. Timothy M. Silveria, 45, of Joplin, and Nycoa K. Kracht, 32, of Laurel, Ind., entered open pleas of guilty in Jasper County Circuit Court to felony counts of theft from a public utility.
-
Alan Marble, Crowder College president, to retire
After 27 years with Crowder College, President Alan Marble has announced his plans to retire on June 30, the formal end of the academic year. “It’s just the right time,” Marble, 58, said in a telephone interview Monday morning. “I’ve enjoyed, I think, every minute of these 27 years, but it’s time to move on to the next challenge.”
- More Local News Headlines
-
Donations being accepted for Moore tornado survivors



