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Schools encouraged to install tornado-safe rooms


Associated Press Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe, right, speaks with Sen. Bobby Glover, D-Carlisle, behind the tornado damaged Carlisle Fire Department Monday.
CARLISLE, Ark.—Just before the sirens sounded in Carlisle, school superintendent Floyd Marshall got the warning from police — a tornado was coming right for the town’s elementary and high school.

But unlike most other schools in Arkansas, the two Carlisle schools have specially designed interior hallways — dubbed tornado-safe rooms — where the district’s 750 students cowered until the storms passed by Friday.

“It doesn’t take but the one time to devastate a community and families and if there’s a way to prevent that from occurring, then we need to make an effort to do it,” Marshall said. “You may never need it, but that one time that you do that you don’t have it, it’s something you can’t recover from.”

The National Weather Service said the Carlisle tornado Friday had a path 2.6 miles long and was rated an E-F1 on the Enhanced Fujita Scale from 0 to 5, meaning it had winds of 86-110 mph. It veered away from the shared campus of the elementary and high schools at the last moment, but Gov. Mike Beebe acknowledged the importance of the rooms on a visit to the city Monday.

“School districts are making the conscious decision when they’re either renovating or doing new construction to go ahead and spend the money while they’re at it,” Beebe told reporters. “I’d like to see them everywhere. I’d like to see them as much as possible. But at this juncture, we’re not in a position to mandate them everywhere, unless you have the money to be able to give them to everybody.” Julie Thompson, a spokeswoman for the Arkansas Department of Education, acknowledged that many schools throughout the state do not have the safe rooms. She said officials do not keep an official count of how many schools have them.

Most of Friday’s storms, which forecasters now say included 11 confirmed tornadoes, came during the morning, something unusual as the afternoon and evening often offer the best conditions for them to form. The morning storms moved through the state while schools were in session.

State law requires schools to hold tornado drills no less than four times per year during the months of September, October, January and February. However, state laws only suggest building the safe rooms for students. Now, though, the state Legislature has set aside $456 million for a program to build and repair crumbling schools across the state after a state Supreme Court decision. Beebe said districts in line for the funding likely could use that money, or money set aside in federal government grants, to build the safe rooms.

“It doesn’t take a lot of encouragement because most of the school officials have been really conscious and proactive about building either safe rooms or hardened areas of their school buildings,” Beebe said. Friday’s storms and tornadoes killed seven people in Arkansas. Beebe and other state officials flew by helicopter to see damage Monday in Carlisle, Earle and Greers Ferry.



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