Across an unprecedented swath of storm-damaged Minnesota — from the far northwest reaches to the Iowa border — public officials, politicians and thousands of people on Friday began picking up the shattered pieces left behind by the worst one-day tally of tornadoes in state history.
State officials reported that up to 40 tornadoes struck Thursday, killing three people, injuring dozens, leaving countless homeless and wreaking an untold amount of damage. It was the worst one-day death toll from tornadoes since 1998.
Gov. Tim Pawlenty spent Friday assessing the damage from the nearly "unprecedented number" of tornadoes but extolling the "can-do attitude" of Minnesotans putting their lives back together.
Pawlenty said recovery is "a big challenge." Of Minnesotans, he said: "They come together in crisis ... These communities will come back; they will be rebuilt."
On Friday the governor signed an executive order authorizing assistance to those affected by the storm. He authorized 75 National Guard soldiers to support law enforcement in southern Minnesota communities affected by tornadoes and another 43 for Wadena County.
He also directed officials to ask the Federal Emergency Management Agency to conduct preliminary damage assessments in seven Minnesota counties. Those assessments will determine if federal disaster relief is needed.
The goal for the weekend and beyond, officials said, is to restore power, clear debris and help people heal.
Minnesota House Speaker Margaret Anderson Kelliher, a candidate to succeed Pawlenty, pledged in a statement Friday "the full resources of state government to provide immediate relief for victims of this storm, and rebuild the communities that have been destroyed."