GREENSBURG, Kansas, May 9, 2007

Notebook: Lessons Learned In Kansas

Sreenivasan On The Life Cycle Of News, Life On The Road, And The Wisdom Of The People He Met

  • Play CBS Video Video Bush Lifts Spirits In Kansas

    During his trip to Greensburg, Kan., President Bush saw some of the homes and businesses that were destroyed by a huge twister and offered comfort to the victims. Hari Sreenivasan reports.

  • Video Bush Visits Tornado Victims

    During his visit to the tornado-ravaged town of Greensburg, Kan., President Bush met with many residents who lost their homes or loved ones. Drew Levinson reports.

  • Video Bush Visits Tornado Victims

    CBS News RAW: Residents of Greensburg, Kan., gave President Bush a warm welcome as he toured areas devastated by last Friday's tornado.

    • A view of tornado-ravaged Greensburg, Kan., May 9, 2007.

      A view of tornado-ravaged Greensburg, Kan., May 9, 2007.  (CBS/Hari Sreenivasan)

    • A view of tornado-ravaged Greensburg, Kan., May 9, 2007.

      A view of tornado-ravaged Greensburg, Kan., May 9, 2007.  (CBS/Hari Sreenivasan)

    • Arial view of tornado-ravaged Greensburg, Kan., May 7, 2007.

      Arial view of tornado-ravaged Greensburg, Kan., May 7, 2007.  (CBS/Hari Sreenivasan)

    • A view of tornado-ravaged Greensburg, Kan., May 9, 2007.

      A view of tornado-ravaged Greensburg, Kan., May 9, 2007.  (CBS/Hari Sreenivasan)

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  • Photo Essay Kansas Town Leveled

    The small town of Greensburg was devastated by a powerful F5 tornado.

  • Interactive Funnels Of Fury

    Explore how and where tornadoes are formed and witness their destructive power.

(CBS)  CBS News correspondent Hari Sreenivasan writes from Greensburg, Kansas on his coverage of the tornado that devastated an entire community.


After spending a few days in the remnants of Greensburg, Kan., I'm more curious about life in the Plain States. Seeing the trees stripped naked, the houses in shambles makes me wonder what the streets were like, what the homes were like, whether kids rode their bikes together in the summer and went fishing at the lake in some sort of idyllic fashion.

When I was first assigned the story on Saturday morning (as we began learning about the ferocity of the storm) and I started Googling the town, I hoped the damage wasn't severe for several reasons. The least important of those reasons was the drugstore on Main Street which had a soda jerk (a man who actually mixes you a soda) who had worked there for more than 55 years. While gathering little nuggets of information, I kept being drawn to this old fashioned icon of what life in small towns used to include and hoped that I’d get a chance to check it out.

As you know by now, Main Street was almost completely decimated and along with it, the Hunter Drugstore. I heard that the famous soda jerk was staying at a shelter in a neighboring town. Though I never got a chance to visit with him, I wish him and so many other people here the best in the long road they have ahead of them.

I tried to find pictures of what this town looked like, but realized that the historical society in town was also destroyed, and while there are pictures of what this town looked like a century ago, not many exist of what it looked like last week. Some of the things I liked about the town are how few chain stores there seemed to be to support a town of such size. That only happens when there are strong relationships between retailers and their clients, a good sign of the strength of a community.

The People

They were some of the warmest and most gracious I've met. In the face of such disaster, amidst their grief, they let my crew and I ask them questions and share their responses with the country. It would be very easy for any of the people I approached to deny me an answer and say 'go away,' but they didn't. I think the part I respected the most was something I've seen after other tragedies; it is the perspective that such tragedy spurs.

To a person, whether it be the state representative who lost his home, or the neighbor who he pulled from the rubble as she held off a wall from her infant son with an arm, to the great grandmother I met at a shelter to the colleagues of a police officer killed by a storm that night, they all knew the value of life. None of them stewed about the upheaval of their lives when the storm took their homes, their cars, their clothes, almost everything. The mother and daughter I re-entered Greensburg with, their first priority was the sentimental things: old pictures, mementos, things you really can't begin to itemize or appraise for an insurance adjuster.

According to one census estimate in the year 2000, 25 percent of the population then was above 65 years of age. Perhaps some of those people won't have the patience to come back and rebuild a town, but in their place might be those who move here for the economic opportunity that may come from rebuilding projects.

The Commute

Since almost every hotel in southwestern Kansas was booked, first with residents from Greensburg who had scattered after the storm, then with the scores of volunteers and relief workers who are here form all over the country, we traveled at least 75 miles each way every day.

We stayed at a place called Larned (which had Mexican food beyond our expectations), had reservations for a night's stay at a town named Liberal, which we didn’t end up using, drove through towns named after Presidents Garfield and Ford, took a right at Spearville, went to the impound yard at the police station in Macksville, dined at RJ's in Haviland, and stopped to take a picture at Kingsley (at a spot which claims to be the midpoint of the country with 1,561 miles in each direction to San Francisco and New York). The highways are long, and straight and for the most part flat. Though early in the week, the light at dusk as we drove back to our different locations was amazingly eerie and textured, something I won't forget.

The Story Arc

There is a certain life cycle to these stories — almost to every story of tragedy and rebuilding I suppose. On Sunday morning, the news crews were all still trying to get their bearings, most of us in awe of the totality of what we were witnessing. We were the lead story on the evening news that night — the pictures beamed into millions of living rooms made it the clear lead for Monday morningand evening.

Morning television was here in force by Monday and Tuesday: the super-weather casters and the national morning anchors were here working side by side with local affiliate reporters for most of whom, some coverage from here will likely lead their future resume tapes and help them get a job in a larger media market.

Almost every network went full speed ahead with this piece, and had sidebars or bounce pieces on Monday night; but on Tuesday, as news of potentially devastating floods surfaced, and forest fires raged in multiple parts of the country, this story began slowly to slip down the priority list. While the residents’ return was a sad illustration of the very personal and collective grief this community will live through, it was also something you couldn't and wouldn't do for Wednesday. The President's arrival gave us just that "peg" to highlight an issue being discussed long before this storm: the National Guard's readiness and whether their deployments to Iraq are stretching them too thin at home.

It's common at these sorts of stories to run into old colleagues from previous employers. It's fun to see old friends, because at the end of the day, when you've tried to best each other by getting elements that your old friends don't, it's still a collegial atmosphere where you can go grab a meal with someone on another team because hopefully your friendship is bigger than the team you play for or the story of the day.

A Bit Of Learnin'

I'm not a farmer but I think I like them. I've almost lived my entire life in metropolitan or megalopolitan cities from Mumbai to Seattle to San Francisco and New York (with brief sojourns in Raleigh N.C. and Yakima, Wash.) and there are certain things about their lack of pretense and plainspokenness that I've always admired.

I learned the basics of how a grain elevator works by speaking to some. They didn't look down at me the way a New Yorker might when asking them about cocktails, or a San Franciscan might when asked what hybrid vehicle to buy, they just tell me. Farmers wear hats to keep the sun out of their eyes, not as a fashion statement or display any sense of irony. Their jeans are tough, not pretty. Their work boots actually do work, and the more I visit places like this, the more I understand why pickup truck commercials brag about how many tons they can haul. Because unlike the obscenely prissy SUVs that roam major cities with plush leather interiors and DVD players in the headrests, these trucks put the utility first as you constantly see them hauling something somewhere somehow.

People in small towns seem truly to be neighborly where I can safely say from my years of experience in big cities, you can easily find yourself compartmentalized in your people-box apartment. To see this contrast, you need look no further than one of these disasters where neighbors — especially in the most rural areas — come with trucks and trailers in tow, to put hundreds of hours of labor into an effort that doesn't pay them or directly benefit them.

It’s that type of "pioneer spirit," as the President described, that I hope survives and thrives and helps get Greensburg to the environmentally Green city that the governor of Kansas envisions it can be.

© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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Add a Comment
by maiingan May 12, 2007 5:22 PM EDT
When do you plan to learn the lesson that there ARE construction methods which will provide adequate protection against tornadoes in above-ground buildings, even affordable homes? The loss of life and property is too high a cost for us city folk to learn the values of community and good blue jeans. Here's a good place to start: http://www.geocities.com/maiinganikan/
Reply to this comment
by leopoldthelm May 11, 2007 2:09 AM EDT
The reason that I am drawn to this story, I was raised in a small town and know how a storm can really devastate lives and a community for many years. The reporter showed compassion to the people while reporting this story. Many small towns should start finding ways to save history because of reports like this.

The reporter stated that the people were warm; this is what I miss about living in a small town. I liked the part of this story about the 80 years old lady said that a Cedar Chest that was saved/spared during the storm belong to her mother. The reporter took time to read the history of the town and also look into the 2000 Census (sign of a good reporter).

The good part of this report is that America%u2019s volunteers and relief workers were there to help! The funny part about this story was the comment about the commute (the highways are long and flat) I can remember my father driving for 100 miles some times and I would not see anyone but the cows along the highway grazing. I understand the eerie (there is no one for miles) the textured I did not understand, but I am laughing because no city-raised person would know what the reporter is trying to say, but the reporter explained it best %u201Ceerie and textured%u201D!

This was honest reporting especially the story part about how the people looked the reporter in the eye; I am glad to know that everybody has not changed %u2018just plain folks%u2019. I don%u2019t like to blog but this was a story I could relate too.
Reply to this comment
by leopoldthelm May 11, 2007 1:59 AM EDT
The reason that I am drawn to this story, I was raised in a small town and know how a storm can really devastate lives and a community for many years. The reporter showed compassion to the people while reporting this story. Many small towns should start finding ways to save history because of reports like this.

The reporter stated that the people were warm; this is what I miss about living in a small town. I liked the part of this story about the 80 years old lady said that a Cedar Chest that was saved/spared during the storm belong to her mother. The reporter took time to read the history of the town and also look into the 2000 Census (sign of a good reporter).

The good part of this report is that America%u2019s volunteers and relief workers were there to help! The funny part about this story was the comment about the commute (the highways are long and flat) I can remember my father driving for 100 miles some times and I would not see anyone but the cows along the highway grazing. I understand the eerie (there is no one for miles) the textured I did not understand, but I am laughing because no city-raised person would know what the reporter is trying to say, but the reporter explained it best %u201Ceerie and textured%u201D!

This was honest reporting especially the story part about how the people looked the reporter in the eye; I am glad to know that everybody has not changed %u2018just plain folks%u2019. I don%u2019t like to blog but this was a story I could relate too.
Reply to this comment
by AgentGGG May 10, 2007 8:10 PM EDT
I encourage the author to stay on this story and follow the rebuilding of this town. While we all hope for a positive solution, my impression is that between inadequate insurance claims and incompetent government assistance, the rebuilding of this entire town faces massive challenges. We will see the true character of our nation, not in the days and weeks after the storm, but in one year after, when we see the state of the town. Then we can compare the real state to our expectations, and similar situations in other countries. Are we a nation that pulls together, or do we ultimately value private interests over all else?
Reply to this comment

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