[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 83 (Thursday, June 9, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3671-S3673]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MONTANA FLOOD HEROES
Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, the Book of Matthew, chapter 23, verses 11
and 12, reads:
The greatest among you will be your servant. For those who
exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble
themselves will be exalted.
I rise today to recognize five of Montana's greatest servants--five
Montana heroes.
Our State has faced severe flooding, unrelenting flooding for the
past several weeks. As water levels rise, Montanans across the State
are stepping up to help. This is the essence of what it means to be a
Montanan: stepping up to help fellow Montanans, ordinary folks doing
extraordinary things for their friends and neighbors. We are all in
this together.
That is why I have begun calling attention to the Montana heroes
going above and beyond the call of duty in the floods we are
experiencing in our State today.
I want to recognize Pastor Cathy Moorehead of the United Methodist
Church and Father Daniel Wathan of Saint Benedict's Church of Roundup.
Last week, Cathy and Daniel showed me the flood damage caused by rising
waters from the nearby Musselshell River. Most of the town of Roundup
has been underwater for days.
I remember many times I had gone to the Busy Bee Cafe in Roundup.
Never in my wildest dreams did I ever think that restaurant might be
underwater. A few days ago, it was. The floods have come back again. It
is not entirely underwater, but so much of it is, it is virtually
destroyed.
Cathy and Daniel took it upon themselves to make sure their neighbors
had a hot meal, a dry place to sleep, medical care, and a shoulder to
cry on--and it is food not only for those displaced by the floods but
also for the National Guard so the National Guard does not have to eat
all those rations they otherwise would have to eat.
I have talked to the Guard. They are so appreciative that they do not
have to eat the food they otherwise had been given. Ask anyone around,
and they will tell you Cathy and Daniel's outstanding efforts continue
to be indispensable.
Floodwaters have returned to Roundup, and our prayers are with them
all today.
This month, the Crow Indian Tribe also faced devastating floods.
Rising water has severed food and water supplies. There is no drinking
water. Rushing water has swept away bridges and streets.
As soon as the floodwaters struck the Crow Reservation, Crow Tribe
member April Toineeta got to work. April worked with the Red Cross to
set up shelter for flood victims. She made sure the Indian Health
Service had the latest information about where medical care was most
urgently needed. She was universally recognized as the go-to person for
help. April. April Toineeta. April has been working 18-hour days,
sleeping on the floor of the Crow Housing Authority, doing whatever it
takes to help her community. April's hard work inspires all of us to
help each other through the floods in any way we can.
When Box Elder Creek burst its banks, floodwaters destroyed the
Harris family home north of Mill Iron, just outside of Ekalaka.
Neighbors Charlie and Gail Brence hopped on four-wheelers and went to
rescue the Harris family of seven. When they arrived, the Harris home
was under 6 feet of water, rapidly rising. They offered the Harris
family a warm and safe place to stay, a shoulder to cry on, and a
helping hand as they worked to save their cattle and salvage personal
belongings from the destroyed home. Gail Brence said: ``We're
Montanans. This is what we do.''
Pastor Cathy, Father Dan, April, and Charlie and Gail are the best of
the
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best Montana has to offer. They represent our can-do attitude, our
willingness to help our neighbor. Our belief is that when times are
tough, we know we are the strongest when we work together.
There are hundreds of other unsung heroes across Montana. I am
calling on all Montanans to share their stories of ordinary folks doing
extraordinary things for their friends and neighbors, whether on
Facebook or call my office. We want to hear these inspiring stories. We
want to share them.
You know, some folks in our State say--and it is somewhat true--that
Montana is really one big town. We tend to know each other. We are big
in area, few in people. But we tend to know each other, about one or
two degrees of separation. We are really one big small town. We are
there to help each other.
In closing, I wish to share a humble thank-you for all Montana's
heroes back home. I do not know what we would do without you. Thank you
for your service.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Missouri.
Flooding in Missouri
Mr. BLUNT. Mr. President, Missouri has withstood a number of
tremendous natural disasters this spring. In fact, the flood our good
friend from Montana just talked about is headed down the Missouri River
from Montana, to the Dakotas, to Missouri right now.
We have had floods along the Mississippi. We have had floods of the
Black River that required the evacuation of part of Poplar Bluff, MO.
We have had tornadoes in both St. Louis and Joplin and now, as I said,
the Missouri River floods.
The Missouri River flood is beginning to reflect what has happened
upstream with the above-normal snowpack that we do not see much of, but
we see it when it melts in the spring. And high rainfall amounts this
spring have made the difference in what is happening in our State.
The flooding along the Missouri River, which is about to get to
crisis stage, will now join floods along the Mississippi River, the
Black River, and tornadoes in St. Louis and Joplin. River levels are
expected to rise near record levels and remain there until early or
mid-August. This, of course, will put a tremendous pressure on our
levee system. The estimates I heard this week were that between now and
2 weeks from today, there will be at least two dozen levees underwater,
which means the water will have gotten high enough to come over the
tops of these levees, and maybe over 50 levees on the Missouri River
before it gets to St. Louis will be underwater and will have water on
both sides of them until well into the summer. Of course, that begins
to undermine the very basis of the levee itself when it stands in water
on both sides.
The Corps and local sponsors are working to reinforce the levees
along the Missouri River. We see that the Department of Agriculture and
the Corps also have to get engaged to get the damaged land cleared and
rehabilitated for all this levee protection to be restored.
There is some discussion on the opening of the levee in the boot
heel, a place called Birds Point. That had been the plan, to open that
levee in a flood disaster, since 1937, but it had not happened since
1937.
Mr. President, 130,000 additional acres of farmland means at this
moment we probably have 500,000 acres of farmland--a little more than
that--underwater, and that number will be much higher than that by this
time next week. But that 130,000 acres at Birds Point will still be
underwater most of next year unless the Corps goes back in, as they
committed they would, and gets a temporary levee that becomes a
permanent levee in as soon as possible.
We also cannot underestimate--and it would be hard to even
overestimate--the challenges Joplin, MO, faces, a city in which the
death toll from the tornadoes has now exceeded any tornado in the last
50 years. I think the mid-1950s was the last time this much loss of
life occurred in a tornado.
I live about 60 miles from Joplin in Springfield, MO. I represented
both Joplin and Springfield in the House of Representatives for 14
years. I had an office in Joplin. I have been there literally hundreds
of times. And as a southwest Missourian, I have seen lots of tornado
damage, but I have never seen anything like this damage.
I went to the area Tuesday after the tornado hit over the weekend. I
think the tornado hit on Sunday afternoon late. I was there most of the
day Tuesday. I was riding with a veteran police sergeant down streets
that both he and I had been down many times, and neither of us could
ever really tell quite where we were because the devastation was that
great. Every street looked like the street next to it. The buildings
were ground up. The 2 by 4s had become toothpicks. It was almost
unrecognizable.
This same tornado, if it would have hit and stayed on the ground for
6 miles in an area of farmland, would have done some damage, but there
would not have been nearly as much damage. As it happened, it ripped
through the city of Joplin in a swath that was at least half a mile
wide and in some places three-quarters of a mile wide. It stayed on the
ground for 6 miles and destroyed approximately 30 percent of the
buildings in a town of 50,000 people. There were 141 people killed,
including those who in the hospitals from injuries since the tornado,
because of the tornado. More than 900 people were injured, and 8,000
homes and apartments were destroyed. And I think here the word
``destroyed'' is the right word. Others were damaged; these were
destroyed. Mr. President, 8,000 places where people lived 3 weeks ago
aren't there today, and more than 500 commercial properties were
demolished by this devastating tornado.
Homes, churches, the high school, the vo-tech school, three
elementary schools, and the Catholic school at all levels are all gone,
and then other schools were damaged. How you get back to school in
August and September of this year with those schools gone is a huge
challenge, one that a community would assume it would never have to
meet, but the community has been meeting it, as have people from all
over the country and particularly from our State.
Rescue efforts, led by groups such as Missouri Task Force 1 and other
public safety officials--fire departments, law enforcement, medical
personnel, the volunteers--have up until now been tireless, but I can
tell you they are getting pretty tired.
People in Missouri and across America have been overwhelmingly
generous with their time and resources in the aftermath of this storm,
and all Missourians are grateful for it. Large corporations and small
community organizations and individuals have helped. People have
responded to calls on the phone by doing whatever they were asked to do
to make a small donation.
The General Motors Foundation announced a $100,000 grant to the Red
Cross, along with two vehicles, full-sized vans, and free access to
their OnStar service after the disaster.
The Ford Motor Company donated another $50,000 to Feeding America for
Joplin, and their employees in the Kansas City plant are assisting as
volunteers in relief efforts.
Walmart committed $1 million.
Home Depot and Walmart both had--there was a Walmart supercenter and
a Home Depot store that were totally demolished, 100-percent
demolished. In both cases, they had late-Sunday-afternoon shoppers in
them.
In one store was a man and his 4-year-old and 1-year-old. I am not
sure they were on the way to the Home Depot, but at the last minute
they were running into the Home Depot, thinking that would be the
safest place to be, and those big concrete walls collapsed inward, and
the mom who sent them to get lightbulbs or whatever she had sent them
to get never saw those three people who were so much of her life
before.
The St. Louis Cardinals donated $25,000 to Convoy of Hope.
The Kansas City Royals and Kansas City Chiefs each gave $35,000 to
Heart to Heart International.
Duracell opened a Power Relief Trailer.
Tide opened a Loads of Hope location, offering laundry services for
the thousands of affected families.
Heart of Missouri United Way collected over $1 million and pledged
that 100 percent of those funds that were raised in that drive would go
to Joplin.
Target contributed $95,000 to relief.
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AT&T and Verizon both gave $50,000.
Sprint, a Missouri company, a Kansas City area-based company, gave
$100,000.
TAMKO gave $1 million. Their headquarters are in Joplin. Their
headquarters were not affected, but many of their employees were.
Loves Travel Shop gave $150,000.
Great Southern and Southwest Missouri Bank both donated $10,000.
The Girl Scouts in Houston, MO, were collecting toys for the children
of Joplin who had lost their toys.
The University of Missouri produced a tornado relief t-shirt with the
slogan ``One State. One Spirit. One Mizzou.''
The Mizzou football team and D. Rowe's Restaurant partnered to fill a
semi truck of groceries and other items to send to the location.
The American Red Cross, the Harvesters Community Food Network, sent
14,000 ready-to-eat meals.
The Kansas Speedway and the Highway Roadhouse and Kitchen collected
items for victims.
The Ozarks Technical Community College is collecting funds to help
people.
The students in a high school in St. Louis, which had its own
tornado, sent things to Joplin as well.
FEMA is doing what it can.
We need to prioritize spending.
As I reach the conclusion of my remarks and mention the people who
need to be mentioned--I sent President Obama a letter. I spoke with
Secretary Napolitano shortly after this disaster insisting that the
Federal Government do what we did in Katrina and reimburse taxpayers
for their expenses at the 100-percent level. We have gone from 75 to
90, so only 10 percent more, and I will be happy with that number. Mr.
President, 75 percent was the first number discussed, but we are at 90
now. The Federal Government needs to do this. And local utility
companies need to get the same kind of assistance others have had in
similar disasters.
In all cases, the first responders were people's neighbors. Their
neighbors will still be there 6 months later when people are still
struggling.
But with thanks to everyone who has helped, with appreciation for the
Federal employees who have been there and absolute insistence that we
do everything we need to do to treat this disaster as it needs to be
treated because it truly is a disaster, I will be working with
everything we can find to make this situation a challenge the community
can meet.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The senior Senator from Rhode Island.
Mr. REED. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that after I am
recognized, Senator Whitehouse be recognized--we are speaking on the
same topic--for up to 10 minutes and, at the conclusion of that time,
Senator Alexander from Tennessee be recognized.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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