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Six essential qualities that
are the key to success: Sincerity, personal integrity, humility, courtesy,
wisdom, charity. - William Menninger
2/10/08 (11:01 p.m.)
Nearly 300 members of
the National Guard responded to call-ups from governors in seven states over the
last week after tornadoes hit the South and snowstorms blanketed the West.
National Guard units responded in Arkansas,
Kentucky and Tennessee after an unseasonable string of winter thunderstorms and
tornadoes charged through communities Feb. 5 and left large swaths of
destruction, death and injuries.
In Kentucky, up to 139 guardsmen with 32 humvees, two UH-60 Black Hawk
helicopters, a heavy equipment wrecker, a fuel tanker and a bus deployed to
tornado damaged areas.
Idaho Army National Guard soldiers of the 145th
Brigade Support Battalion shovel snow off Timberlake High School Feb. 2
in Spirit Lake, Idaho. U.S. Army photo by Capt. Bill Muthiora
The Kentucky Guard provided emergency power for
the Muhenberg Water Company and operated a mobile command post in Muhenberg
County. Soldiers of the 307th Maintenance Company supported state and local law
enforcement agencies at traffic control points.
In Arkansas, Army National Guard soldiers aided victims of a devastating tornado
that touched down in Atkins. Arkansas National Guard troops from the 142nd Fires
Brigade were called out late Feb. 5, and reported to disaster sites in the early
hours of Feb. 6.
The soldiers provided a 5,000-gallon water truck to Clinton and two 500-gallon
water trailers and a generator to the Town of Mountain View. Guard aviation
assets provided aerial reconnaissance for Gov. Mike Beebe and the state's
Department of Emergency Management. Twenty-eight guardsmen performed search and
rescue missions in Atkins on Wednesday and aided with cleanup missions, through
Friday.
The Tennessee National Guard operated five UH-60s in aerial assessment missions.
In addition, 24 guardsmen supported civilian emergency response agencies with
debris removal. Many are currently operating from a support base and civilian
shelter at the Lafayette Armory.
Additional Tennessee guardsmen are planning to supply emergency power for the
Red Boiling Springs Water System and a hospital in Hartsville. Up to 150
guardsmen are also planning to support debris removal operations in Macon,
Trousdale and Sumner counties.
In the West, where heavy snowfalls stranded residents and motorists, National
Guard units in Wisconsin, Oregon, New Mexico and Idaho were slowing or halting
their operations Friday after several days of emergency response missions.
After the winter storms stranded an estimated 800 motorists on a 19-mile stretch
of Interstate-90 in Wisconsin, 68 Wisconsin National Guard soldiers and airmen
deployed and conducted health and wellness checks and delivered about 5,000
bottles of water and about 350 packaged meals to stranded victims. The Guard
also flew aerial surveillance missions for emergency response personnel.
Thirty-four members of the Oregon National Guard cleared snow away from roadways
and utilities. Soldiers were operating two Army Guard mine detectors to locate
fire hydrants, water covers and pipes.
New Mexico National Guardsmen provided assistance to the town of Chama after
Gov. Bill Richardson declared a state of emergency for Rio Arriba County.
Twenty-seven Soldiers were assisting local residents with snow removal.
In Idaho, 63 Guardsmen deployed Feb. 2 to remove snow from the roofs of nine
schools in the northern part of the state after four feet of snow crippled
school systems in three counties.
(Tech Sgt. Mike R. Smith is assigned to the National Guard Bureau.)