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Tornado
Shelter in Disguise
David B. South
Published in the Dallas Morning News April 21, 2002, P.5J
Texas
tornado season is here. If previous years are any indication, we
can expect 125 twisters to touch down between now and early July
in the Lone Star State.
Knowing
that our state is at high risk for often deadly windstorms, what
are we doing to protect ourselves and our most precious resource
- our children?
I'd
like to share what school officials in my Texas community have done
because I think it can serve as a model for other districts across
the state who want to provide a safe haven for students when violent
weather strikes. In January, the Italy Independent School District
, located about midway between Dallas and Waco, put the finishing
touches on a 1,500-seat multipurpose center that is being used for
everything from basketball games to theater performances. It replaces
an aging gym that had long outlived its usefulness.
But
more importantly, the new center was built in such a way that it
can withstand even the fierce winds of a level 5 tornado.
The
town's emergency personnel have the keys to the facility so they
can open the doors to the public whenever the need arises.
In
other words, Italy has done what I believe every school district
in Texas should consider doing. It has built a community tornado
shelter disguised as a gym. In this case, school officials opted
for a steel-reinforced concrete building known as a Monolithic Dome
because it was affordable and energy efficient while also meeting
or exceeding the Federal Emergency Management Agency's criteria
for structures that can provide "near-absolute protection"
from tornadoes. But there are other types of disaster-resistant
structures that can achieve the same goals.
This
kind of initiative is not just for wealthy school districts. In
fact, Italy is such a property-poor district that it qualified for
financial assistance from the state, which funded 81 percent of
the $2 million facility. The nearby Avalon Independent School District
began construction on its own Monolithic Dome multipurpose facility
last month, and it too is receiving state funding because of its
small tax base.
Clearly,
school districts cannot launch these types of major building projects
simply because they want a community tornado shelter. But disaster
protection should be high on the list of priorities whenever the
need arises for a new school facility.
While
it is rare for tornadoes to cause fatalities in schools, it has
happened time and time again. Most traditional school buildings,
with their free-span roofs, simply do not offer much resistance
to the high winds that a twister spawns. There is no question that
death of any child is tragic, but it is even worse when we know
that it could have been prevented.
As
a school board member and father of 10, I sleep better at night
knowing that the children of my community have a safe haven during
this tornado season and for many years to come. Don't all the children
of Texas deserve the same?
David
B. South lives in Italy, Texas and serves on the Italy School Board.
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