subscribesubscriber servicescontact usabout ussite map
Wed, Nov 25 2009 

Resources

print this story   Print this story
email this story   E-mail this story
  Post to del.icio.us

Photos


Globe/Roger Nomer Pat Camerer cleans debris from a house destroyed by the May 10 tornado in Picher. The Federal Emergency Management Agency is monitoring the removal of the debris.

Published September 02, 2008 12:05 am - PICHER, Okla. — John Baker and some of his friends were picking through the rubble of what remained of his cousin’s tornado-ravaged house in Picher.
There wasn’t much left, but they found a few things they thought might be salvaged and threw them in the back of a pickup. They hurried because their time is running out.


'It's not coming back'



By Wally Kennedy

wkennedy@joplinglobe.com

PICHER, Okla. — John Baker and some of his friends were picking through the rubble of what remained of his cousin’s tornado-ravaged house in Picher.

There wasn’t much left, but they found a few things they thought might be salvaged and threw them in the back of a pickup. They hurried because their time is running out.

As a giant “knuckle” claw grabbed some debris nearby and dropped it into a trailer, the 17-year-old Baker said: “It’s actually kind of sad. I want to see this place get cleaned up, but they are getting rid of the town. It’s not coming back.”

Soon, the pile of debris that was his cousin’s house will be gone. It will be trucked to a landfill in Southeast Kansas.

After the debris sat untouched for more than three months, federal and state emergency-management authorities finally settled on a plan that is clearing the rubble from the May 10 tornado that strafed the south side of Picher, killing seven people.

Each load that leaves Picher is monitored by an employee of the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The employee, who said FEMA rules do not permit him to give out his name, said he had spent time in Greensburg, Kan., where a tornado in May 2007 leveled most of the town.

“In Greensburg, they are rebuilding. That town will come back,” he said. “But here, that’s not going to happen. It’s really sad to see this town die. It’s gut-wrenching to watch, and the people who lived here must feel the same way.”

Picher, the epicenter of the Tri-State Mining District, one of the world’s richest lead and zinc mining fields, had a population in the 1920s of more than 20,000 people. Today, the town has fewer than a couple of hundred people.

Picher was declared a federal Superfund site in the early 1980s because of heavy-metal contamination. It was ranked as the worst hazardous-waste site in the nation when it was placed on the National Priorities List.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, in cooperation with the state of Oklahoma, would spend more than $125 million over the next 25 years on cleanup plans, including the removal of lead-contaminated soil from residential yards. The contaminated soil was linked to high levels of lead poisoning in Picher’s children.

In 2006, a study by the Army Corps of Engineers found that more than one-third of the structures in Picher sit on ground that could collapse at any time. Among the structures are 139 houses, 11 businesses and six churches. Also listed were four playgrounds and parks, including Reunion Park. Even the Picher Mining Field Museum sits on unstable ground.

The study led to the creation of a plan to buy out and relocate residents who voluntarily want to leave Picher and the nearby town of Cardin. The buyout, funded as a joint effort by the EPA and the state of Oklahoma, has been under way for more than a year. The tornado complicated the buyout procedure and, in some instances, pushed many residents to leave sooner than they had planned.

All of the houses that will be bought by the Lead-Impacted Communities Relocation Assistance Trust will either be moved to a new site near Quapaw or destroyed.



print this story    email this story    comment on this story   

Click to discuss this story with other readers on our forums.


Add a comment on this story







autoconx
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide

Announcements


Click here to VOTE!!

Click here!!

: Special Offer For New Subscribers : 32 buy 1 get 1 free offers

Click Here!


Featured Jobs

COMMUNITY SUPPORT WORKER

full time, providing support and case management for children and their families. BS/BA/BSW in psychology, social
...>MORE

RESIDENTIAL PSYCH TECH

full time and part-time, for all shifts, to provide direct care and supervision to adolescents in residential trea
...>MORE

THERAPIST-COUNSELOR

looking for licensed professional counselor or licensed clinical social worker for fulltime position providing par
...>MORE

COMMUNITY SUPPORT WORKER

fulltime, providing support and case management for adults with chronic mental illness. BS/BA/BSW in psychology, s
...>MORE

ATTENTION HOLIDAY HELP

$17.25 base-appointments, Full/Part time customer sales and service, no experience necessary, conditions apply, a
...>MORE

SERVICE COORDINATOR

excellent career opportunity! Full time positions available providing case management services assisting individua
...>MORE

RESIDENT APARTMENT MANAGER

part-time, for apartment complex program designed for mentally ill adults. Duties include ordering supplies, move-
...>MORE

LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSE

full time. Excellent benefits, competitive wage, shift differential, working in drug and alcohol treatment facilit
...>MORE

See all ads

Featured Transportation

2005 SUZUKI TWIN PEAKS 700,
4x4, Vtwin, automatic, $5,000/offer 417-451-8860....>MORE

SUBARU, 1994 IMPREZA,
great mpg, runs excellent, needs paint, $1200. 434-8591....>MORE

CHRYSLER 1998 TOWN AND COUNTRY
$1775
loaded, front/rear heat and air. 437-4424.
...>MORE

2003 CHEVROLET MALIBU
tilt, cruise, power windows/locks, CD and more, excellent condition, $3950. 417-540-5263....>MORE

GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES

solid blacks, parents on premises, payment plans, ready for Christmas, $500. 417-955-0095 or 417-268-0688.
...>MORE

1991 BUICK HEARSE
white, gray top, 33,048 miles, roll bed, $3900. 673-7667....>MORE

1994 ISUZU BOX TRUCK
with 20' box. Front bumper damage, 1 headlight broken, runs great - $2,900. 417-438-4019....>MORE

See all ads

Featured Homes

Deerfield Estates
in Carl Junction, prime building sites, reduced $10,000 each. 417-825-0052...>MORE

See all ads

Other Cool Stuff

DIAMOND SOLITAIRE
Pear-shaped, one carat, diamond solitaire in gold setting. $2,000. Please call 417-825-3238...>MORE

CASH FOR GOLD
highest payout guaranteed. (417)622-9706 miaalloy@yahoo.com...>MORE

CHIEFS TICKETS
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS TICKETS FOR SALE. 417-438-8988....>MORE

ROLAND DIGITAL PIANO
HP-1 Like new, bench $1000. 417-438-2024....>MORE

FURNITURE AND APPLIANCES
Must sell! Any reasonable offer. 782-2565, 782-2771...>MORE

LIKE NEW FULL SIZE HARVARD AIR HOCKEY TABLE
$180’ new white Sunbeam over thea range microwave, in box, $120. 438-4019....>MORE

MAHOGANY DROPLEAF TABLE
Duncan Phife mahogany dropleaf table and 4 chairs, great condition, $400 or offer. (417)782-2565, (417)782-2771...>MORE

2007 CUB CADET LT1050,
leaf bagger, 50” deck, $1150/best offer (417)451-8860....>MORE

STORY & CLARK PIANO,
lots of sheet music and books, $500 or best offer. (417)649-6174, (417)438-9432...>MORE

SHIH-TZU/LHASA,
female, 6 months, all shots, $75. (417)776-8215....>MORE

See all ads


 

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI Classified Advertising NetworkCNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2009. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Our site is powered by Zope and our Internet Yellow Pages site is powered by PremierGuide.
Some parts of our site may require you to download the Flash Player Plugin.
View our Privacy Policy
Advertiser index

 

 

The Joplin Globe Electronic Edition