City
officials said crews have been working 12-hour shifts, seven days per
week since the April 3 tornado hit to remove 35,000 cubic yards of tree
limbs and housing debris from the city's southwest side.
"With all the trash and all the limbs and trees down, it's difficult to live and stressful to live," Mayor Robert Cluck said.
Officials
estimate it is enough debris to fill 11 Olympic-sized swimming pools or
stretch across the country from Key West, Fla., to Seattle.
"I was proud
of my crews through the Super Bowl, with all the snow and ice removal,
but this was a lot tougher, and they did what needed to be done," said
Keith Melton, public works director. "We pulled in crews from our Water
Utilities, Parks Departments and Tarrant County. Some of them were doing
work totally out of their environment, picking up trash piles and
putting it all into bins and they were very happy to do it. All of these
employees put their heart into this effort."
The city ended on Thursday brush and debris cleanup from the storm.
The siding on
Jordan Jones' home is still peeling off. There are holes in his house,
and his roof needs repair. His neighbor's car windows are still
shattered, the garage door is boarded up, and the fence has been
uprooted.
But things are getting back to normal, he said.
"Wednesday,
it was completely torn up over here and then this morning, they moved in
with the heavy equipment operation, and they cleaned up north and south
and everything and hauled everything away," Jones said.
Arlington
has already spent nearly $2 million on the recovery effort, thanks to a
disaster declaration that allows the city to immediately spend without
waiting on City Council approval.
"We're still
going to be OK," Cluck said. "We'll still have surplus at the end of
this year, as we have for the last three years."
The surplus
will likely come in handy as the city waits to find out whether it
qualifies for federal disaster relief assistance. Cluck said he's not
overly optimistic because the city likely will not meet the financial
threshold it takes to qualify for federal aid despite more than 500
damaged homes.
Melton
extended special thanks to Tarrant County Commissioner Andy Nguyen,
Republic Services, Barson Utilities and Gra-Tex Utilities for assistance
in the cleanup efforts.
The
Department of Public Works will resume normal operations Friday. Anyone
with additional storm-related debris should to call 817-459-6777.
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