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Fairdale Is Coming Back, Six Months After The Tornado

It’s been six months since a deadly tornado hit Fairdale, Illinois. Some residents are ready to rebuild, while others prefer not to start new memories there.Jenna Dooley provides an update from the Fairdale tornado

85-year-old Clem Schultz is back inFairdalewith his dog, a white Shepard. He’s meeting his former neighbor JoeWiegand. For the past several years, Wiegand has traveled the country as a well-known Teddy Roosevelt repriser. He still owned property in Fairdale.

Clem wants to show Joe a video he took of the tornado from the upper level of his house:

CLEM: About two minutes into this, my house came down and knocked the phone out of my hand and it kept recording.

JOE: So now you are still standing up taking video right now?

CLEM: Right about now is when I realized ‘uh-oh.’

JOE: See the shaking? Your house is shaking apart right now, isn’t it?

CLEM: Yeah. At this point, I was laying under several feet of rubble, wondering why I was still alive.

The video cuts to silence. 

Reality Sets In

Clem swears he thought the storm would veer off. But minutes later, everything has changed as an emergency responder finds him.

CLEM: He said ‘okay, now you’re by this beam, I want you to sit down and put your feet down here on the floor, but don’t look down.’ I said ‘why don’t look down?’ He said, ‘because your wife is right under you and she’s dead.’

JOE: You look down?

CLEM: Of course. I reached down, and got her pulse…no pulse. We had propane leaking. They told me, ‘yougottaget out of here.’

Clem says he doesn’t plan to rebuild--too many memories. He is looking at moving closer to his kids.

"Just Use It To Save Lives"

“The reason Clem wants this video to be out there is to save lives.”

That’s Luke Odell, a PhD student studying tornado science at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He was inFairdaleon April9thchasing the tornado when he first met Clem.

Over the past few months, Clem has had to visit the V-A hospital in Madison for back issues related to the tornado. Each time he has an appointment, he also touches base with Luke and his research into the storm:

“If you see an up close and personal view of something that deadly, that’s going to drive home the point of getting out of the way to somewhere safe and ensuring that you keep your family safe. I think it can be used both from the research perspective but also a public awareness perspective as well.”

Researcher Luke Odell says seeing what happened inFairdalefirsthand changed how he views his research, saying he now fully understands the emotional toll. He’s even working on a documentary showing both sides of a storm, from the chaser's perspective and the victim's. That includes Clem’s video.

“You can’t learn everything about the weather from behind a desk,” Luke Odell said.

Building New

Before and after of Joe Wiegand's renovated church property
Before and after of Joe Wiegand's renovated church property

Back inFairdale, JoeWiegandstands on a few crumbling steps and looks into the basement of an old church he renovated before it was destroyed. He sees new construction just across the road where Dave and ShariNovotnyshared a home.

Dave Novotny says he has seen good come out of tragedy.

"We were standing right here in the driveway one day, maybe two or three days afterwards, and all of the sudden, hundreds of people walked up. They had chainsaws and they were ready to work…[chokes up]  It still gets to me now. It was an amazing experience.”

His wife Shari tells Joe the process to re-build has been moving along pretty well:

JOE: What do you call it? When are we going to the house?

Shari Novotny checks in on her new Fairdale home
Credit Jenna Dooley
Shari Novotny checks in on her new Fairdale home

SHARI: Yeah, that’s what we do at the end of the day. It’s like Christmas. You come out and say ‘what’s new today?’

After seeing the progress six months on, JoeWiegandis optimistic.

JOE: I’ll tellya, when I saw Clem, I was so relieved ‘cause I saw the same Clem. Resilient. They made this generation out of leather, bailing wire, and duct tape. It was good to see him. He looks good and sounds good. He’s still Clem and that’s a good thing.

CLEM: Yeah. I think so.

Still Accepting Donations

TheDeKalb County Long-Term Recovery Corporation is a volunteer-run group founded after the April 9 event. President Bill Nicklas says he has been "delighted" with the progress.

According to the group, as of Sept. 1, four new foundations are underway in Fairdale, and three in rural DeKalb County. The groups estimates seven more foundations will be dug in the next few months. Five owners are completing the rehabilitation of their homes.

Nicklas says a new community septic field could be completed by Nov. 1.

Copyright 2021 WNIJ Northern Public Radio. To see more, visit WNIJ Northern Public Radio.

re-building continues in Fairdale, IL
Jenna Dooley /
re-building continues in Fairdale, IL
former Fairdale resident Joe Wiegand tours the town with Clem Schultz (left)
Jenna Dooley /
former Fairdale resident Joe Wiegand tours the town with Clem Schultz (left)
the Novotny's new home in Fairdale
Jenna Dooley /
the Novotny's new home in Fairdale
Clem Schultz's dog, Missy, who has since been nicknamed "white tornado"
Jenna Dooley /
Clem Schultz's dog, Missy, who has since been nicknamed "white tornado"
Shari Novotny checks in on her new Fairdale home
Jenna Dooley /
Shari Novotny checks in on her new Fairdale home

Jenna Dooley has spent her professional career in public radio. She is a graduate of Northern Illinois University and the Public Affairs Reporting Program at the University of Illinois - Springfield. She returned to Northern Public Radio in DeKalb after several years hosting Morning Edition at WUIS-FM in Springfield. She is a former "Newsfinder of the Year" fromthe Illinois Associated Press andrecipient of NIU's Donald R. Grubb Journalism Alumni Award. She is an active member of the Illinois News Broadcasters Association and an adjunct instructor at NIU.