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Joplin honors FEMA official

Joplin has recognized a retiring Federal Emergency Management Agency official who directed much of FEMA's response to the 2011 tornado.
A wrecked car is seen in what appears to be the foundation of a house in tornado ravaged Joplin, Missouri on Tuesday, May 24. Rescuers combed through overturned cars and flattened buildings Tuesday hunting for survivors after this Missouri town was struck by one of the strongest tornadoes ever recorded in the US. A massive mile-wide funnel-cloud, with winds of up to 200 miles (320 kilometers) an hour, tore with devastating force through the town of Joplin late Sunday, leaving 116 people dead and hundreds more missing. AFP PHOTO / Mira OBERMAN (Photo credit should read MIRA OBERMAN/AFP/Getty Images)

JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) - Joplin has recognized a retiring Federal Emergency Management Agency official who directed much of FEMA's response to the 2011 tornado.

The Joplin Globe reports Mayor Melodee Colbert-Kean presented a proclamation Friday to Richard Serino, deputy FEMA administrator. According to the proclamation, Serino made the visit to Joplin one of his last official acts before retiring Jan. 23.

Serino arrived in Joplin the morning after the tornado to assess what federal assistance would be needed in the wake of the EF-5 storm that hit Joplin, Duquesne and rural areas of Jasper and Newton counties and resulted in 161 deaths.

The city also held a ceremony to honor Serino during a tour of the a Fire Station that replaced one of the city's two fire stations destroyed by the tornado.

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Information from: The Joplin (Mo.) Globe, http://www.joplinglobe.com

(Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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