'Please come help us': Winterboro residents plead for help with cleanup efforts after deadly EF2 tornado
It has been one month since a deadly EF2 tornado tore through Winterboro, and residents are pleading for local leaders to step in and help with the cleanup process.
Joey Peters said he was home on March 15 when he got an alert on his phone to take shelter, and he is glad he listened.
"It hit all around my house, but thank God our house was spared," Peters said. "We lost barns. We lost about 50 big trees."
Peters was not the only one. Several homes were damaged, and a bus was launched onto the roof of a local high school. Since then, Residents have been working to clean up and rebuild.
"The cleanup process started with a bang, and everybody was here to help," Peters said. "We have a great community, and everybody does pitch in and help each other, and it's just a testament to the Winterboro community and the people who live here. We're not going to let anybody go without."
Though they have been working, that process is not over. Peters said that now they need help from local leaders.
"We sawed up a lot of trees, and it's all been piled on the side of the road, and there it sits, waiting on the county or the state of Alabama to give us a little help getting rid of all that,"
On Bob White Road, so many trees line the roadway waiting to be picked up that the two-lane road is small enough for only one vehicle. That is why Peters is pleading for help.
"Please come help us," he said. "Our beautiful community is in shambles, and we need some help getting it back to the way it was."