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Monday, March 31, 2008
Sumter Regional close to full service
Posted by
Edgar Treiguts
at
3/31/2008 08:46:00 AM
Labels: Americus, Baker County, storms, Sumter County, Sumter Regional Hospital, Taylor County, tornadoes
Sunday, February 3, 2008
Twister-hit hospital selling bricks for new building
Destroyed vehicle in SRH parking lot. Hospital is in the background, March 2, 2007. (Dave Bender)
The hospital destroyed in a tornado that ripped through Americus nearly a year ago is for sale - one brick at a time.
Sumter Regional Hospital is selling bricks from the building ripped apart by the March 1st, 2007, storm to help pay for a new hospital. For months, doctors treated more than 5,400 patients in eight counties in tents set up near the hospital.
Since then, the facility has operated in a temporary structure.
Basic medical triage services were held in several tents like these, set up in the hospital's parking lot. March 2, 2007. (Dave Bender)
The bricks go for $25, $50 and $100 each. For more information, contact the hospital's marketing department at (229) 928-4000.
(Dave Bender)
The tornadoes killed nine people in Sumter, Taylor and Baker counties, and caused more than 210 million dollars in damage, demolishing dozens of Georgia homes and businesses.
Click here for more GPB News coverage of the twister and its aftermath.
(The Associated Press)
Posted by
Dave
at
2/03/2008 10:50:00 PM
Labels: Americus, Baker County, Sumter County, Sumter Regional Hospital, Taylor County, tornado, twister
Thursday, July 12, 2007
Sumter, Taylor Co. tornado survivors getting more help
The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is awarding $471,000 dollars to Georgia's Division of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities and Addictive Diseases.
The funds will go toward extending a crisis counseling project for survivors of the tornado that devastated Sumter and Taylor counties March first.
Since the storm, hundreds of people have sought help overcoming psychological stress disorders. Many report suffering from feelings of despondency and helplessness.
Jeannette David, a mental health planner from the Department of Human Resources explains how outreach coordinators aid residents, providing them, "with information on how to cope, how to deal with the that stresses they're experiencing; and to let them know that, probably, any upset that they have or any stresses that they might be feeling is – normal, because they're reacting to an abnormal situation...”
The funding will continue until April, 2008.
More information is available on the survivor helpline at 1-800-342-7843.
Posted by
Dave
at
7/12/2007 04:24:00 PM
Labels: FEMA, Georgia Department of Human Resources, Sumter County, Taylor County, twister