Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear says emergency crews 'are out there going door-to-door, but there aren't any doors' as tornado death toll rises

Emergency management people are trying to find survivors after a tornado ripped through parts of Kentucky.
Emergency management people are going door to door, but there aren't any doors. Beshear said on Face the Nation on Sunday that a lot of this is going through the blocks and the rubble and trying to see if there are people alive or dead.
The Recount is December 12, 2021.

Kentucky was hit particularly hard by the tornado event.

In an interview with CNN's Jake Tapper on Sunday, Beshear said it would be a miracle if anyone else was found in the rubble of the factory that was destroyed by a tornado. There were over 100 employees working at the time.

Beshear said that it was 15 feet deep of steel and cars on top of the roof.
The death toll in the state has reached 80 people, and Beshear expects it to exceed 100. He told CBS that his father's hometown doesn't exist anymore.

The governor established the Team Western Kentucky Tornado Relief Fund to help families in Western Kentucky pay for funerals and recover after the severe weather.
Beshear lost family members during the tornado.
It's not going to be easy, but we're going to get through it. Beshear said that he was still emotional after learning that his uncle had died. We're going to see the other side. We are going to rebuild.