Almost as many may never get on board. Come on in out of the rain. Hello. How are you doing . Pelley for a fortunate few, there is the health wagon. Who are these people . They are people with desperate need. They have no insurance, and they usually wait, we say, until theyre train wrecks. Safer Hildebrand Gurlitt was one of hitlers favorite art dealers. As the fuhrer was accumulating power, he was accumulating thousands of artworks. After he died, his son cornelius inherited them. Did you have any idea that he had so many paintings in that apartment . I tell you what nobody had any idea about this. Masters like matisse, chagall and otto dix worth more than a billion dollars today. Who do these masterpieces belong to now . Thats our story tonight. Im steve kroft. Im lesley stahl. Im morley safer. Im bob simon. Im scott pelley. Those stories tonight on 60 minutes. We know were not the center of your life, but well do our best to help you connect to what is. 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Simon the magnitude nine earthquake that struck japan on march 11, 2011, not only shook the ground, it shook the japanese peoples faith in their government and the Nuclear Power industry. You can see the impact of the disaster in the towns right around the plant, only you cant get there. The earthquake did some damage, the tsunami did more. But the reason many of them are empty and off limits today is because of the Nuclear Accident at the fukushima power plant next door. The whole area is now a radioactive wasteland, and the people who lived there dont know if theyll ever be able to go home; many dont know if theyll want to. Three years later, the events of march 11 darkened their lives so deeply that many speak of it simply as 3 11. The hell that broke loose on march 11, 2011, was the strongest earthquake in japans history. When the shaking stopped, a tsunami raced towards shore with as much fury as nature can muster. Almost all of the more than 18,000 people who died that day on japans northeast coast died in the flood. The quake didnt do much damage to the Fukushima DaiichiNuclear Power station, but the tsunami shut down the reactors emergency cooling systems, and they started to melt down. Hydrogen gases inside the buildings then exploded, spreading radiation into communities more than 25 miles away. Today, in the town of tomioka, the radiation levels are considered safe enough to allow people in during the day. Loudspeakers warn visitors that they must leave by 3 00 p. M. We were alone on the day we were there. The disaster seems to have stopped time. The clock shows 2 46, the moment the earthquake hit, and the damage to shops and homes looks like it could have happened yesterday. The stack of newspapers we found were dated march 12, 2011, the day after the quake and tsunami. You can see people had to leave in a hurry. That was the morning the government told people of this town and neighboring towns to get out quickly. Welcome to okuma, says the sign. Population today, three years later zero. More than 11,000 people left town that day and never returned. Would you ever want to go back to okuma to live there again . Norio kimura translated yes, i would like to before i die. Simon norio kimura lived with his wife and two daughters next door to his parents. The tsunami killed his father, his wife, and his youngest daughter, yuna, a bright and cheerful sevenyearold. This is what their homes looked like before march 11, 2011. This is whats left today foundations, and scraps of memories that he keeps in a small box by what was once the front door. Kimura this is a shoe she was wearing that day, which was found in a heap of rubble six months after the disaster. Simon because of radiation, kimura can only visit his former home ten times a year and stay only five hours. In february, his allotted day came in the middle of a blizzard. On each visit, kimura brings flowers to a small shrine he built to honor his family. They were among the 111 people who died in okuma that day. The remains of a 110 have been recovered. The only one still missing is norio kimuras daughter, yuna. Ten times a year, he goes back home to search for her. On saturday, you were digging again in okuma. It was snowing, it was freezing. Why . Kimura to find yuna, of course. And also if i stopped searching or gathering her things, i will lose the connection with her. To be honest, the reason why i can live my life every day is because i have to find her and her things. I need to do this to keep my sanity. Simon volunteers now help kimura dig through the piles of debris left by the tsunami. Everyones dressed in protective clothing to limit their exposure to radiation. The digging seems futile, but on this day, kimura unearthed clothing he says belonged to his surviving daughter, mayu. On march 11, the day of the tsunami, kimura made a mistake for which he will never forgive himself. He was at work on a farm, and he stayed there. Did you think then that there would be a tsunami . Kimura there was a radio at my work, and my boss told me that the tsunami was going to be three meters tall. My house is five to six meters above sea level, so i was convinced that our home would be fine, and did not worry about it at all after that. Simon do you think there is anything you could have done to save your family . Kimura i should have gone home right away. I regret believing the information easily while my family was in lifethreatening danger. Even now, i say to myself, what was i thinking . Simon when radiation forced the evacuation of okuma, the town leader told norio kimura to stop searching for the missing and start caring for the living. So he and his daughter moved here to the japanese alps, where the brisk air and the snow capped mountains made radiation and tsunamis difficult to imagine. Kimura has traded farming for a guest house hes planning to open. His daughter, mayu, talks about her mother more than her missing sister, and doesnt ask why her father continues searching for her. Their new Mountain Home is 2,000 feet above the perils of the sea, and 180 miles from the fukushima plant. Ghost towns surround the plant now, but three years later, there are still more than 4,000 workers there, all of them wearing layers of protection. Because of the exposure to radiation, the men in this building are only allowed to work two and a half hours a day. Theyre not producing any electricity, theyre just cleaning up. Were tepco workers adequately trained to handle the emergency . Yoichi funabashi i dont think so. Simon within months of the accident, yoichi funabashi, a former newspaper editor, headed an investigation into what went wrong and why. It was the only investigation not sponsored by the government, and its conclusions were brutal. Funabashi i was very much concerned about the government not telling the truth to the public. Simon the revelations in funabashis report added to the publics anger and dismay. He wrote that, from the beginning, the government had conspired with the industry to convince people that Nuclear Power is safe. So, the government effort at the time was to convince people that there was nothing to worry about . Funabashi exactly. Nothing to worry about. Dont worry. Okay, even dont prepare for that. The severe accident, okay. Because that would cause that unnecessary unease and unnecessary misunderstanding. Simon and theres no reason to prepare. Funabashi no reason to prepare. So, this avoidance ultimately translated into unpreparedness. Lake barrett Mother Nature threw a real curve ball to the japanese with that huge tsunami. Simon last year, tepco hired American NuclearEngineer Lake barrett as an advisor. Barrett directed the cleanup at the three Mile Island Nuclear plant after its accident in 1979. Its estimated that the cleanup is going to take 30 the 40 years. To a layman, that sounds very, very long. Can you explain why thats. Lake barrett to me, thats. Thats not long at all. That. Thats what i would expect for that kind of thing. Its a huge challenge. Its. Its a big onsite mess that they have to clean up, and its going to take them decades to do it. It took us ten years to do three mile island, and the three mile island accident was much simpler than they have at fukushima. Simon are they where you thought they would be three years later . Barrett id hoped theyd be further along. Its been challenging, technically, its been challenging culturally and politically for them. But theyre making Good Progress now. Simon sounds like youre being a little diplomatic. Barrett well, the Decision Making process in japan is. Is complicated. Simon Decision Making in japan requires consensus, and reaching consensus often takes a very long time. The most difficult job will be to dismantle the melted reactors, but radiation is too high for workers to get there. For now, tepco is inundated with groundwater that leaks into the reactors and gets contaminated. Every day, 100,000 gallons of radioactive water has to be pumped out before it reaches the ocean. Tepco is filling storage tanks almost as fast as it can build them, and theyre notorious for leaking. Another enormous cleanup is happening outside the plant. Entire communities are being cleared of contaminated materials that will have to be stored for generations. This part of japan is known for its agriculture, but the only crop growing now is the multitude of black bags holding the radioactive waste, filling the empty spaces in towns like okuma. Now, some of the kids from okuma live and go to school 70 miles away. How many of you would like to go back to okuma . Everybody. How many of you think you will go back to okuma . Whats keeping you from going back to okuma now . You can tell me. translated because theres a lot of radiation, theres a lot of Radioactive Material there. Simon these kids will be middleaged before the cleanup is finished. Their homes could have been rebuilt quickly if it had just been an earthquake and a tsunami. Its the manmade disaster which will take decades to repair. This is the class that norio kimuras daughter, yuna, would have been in if she were alive. Her friend kurea remembers they ate lunch together. Where is she now . Kurea translated in okuma. Shes lonely, being alone in the town of okuma all this time. I think she must be lonely. Simon about a third of the residents from okuma decided to stick together and moved into what the government called temporary housing. Temporary is lasting a long time. The three generations of kimuras that once lived together are now split apart. Norio and his daughter live in nagano, five hours away from his mother, tomoe. She lives in the temporary housing, alone in a cold and cramped room furnished with photographs. The kimuras, like many japanese, have a strong connection to their dead and feel obliged to help them be at peace. As long as the dead are in limbo, so are the living. Youve lost so much of your family, why arent you together with your son now . Tomoe kimura translated im with my husbands ashes now. Once i find a proper place to put him, id like to go to nagano. Simon what do you think the right place will be . Tomoe kimura our Family Cemetery in okuma is contaminated with radiation now. I could come back two or three times a year to burn incense for him, but my grandchild would not be able to come. I dont want to keep him where his grandchild, whom he used to adore so much, cant even come to visit. Simon ten times a year, norio kimura visits his ancestors in the Family Cemetery, a place where he thought he would be laid to rest one day and where his children would come to visit him. But he wont find any peace, he says, until after he finds yuna. Do you think theres any chance of ever finding your daughter . Norio kimura i know that the chance is very slim, but no matter how slim the chance is, i still cannot stop. From the outside looking in, i know that this is very unlikely. But i still cant stop, even if i cannot ever find her. Cbs money watch update sponsored by lincoln financial. Calling all chief life officers. Glor good evening. Gm starts making repairs this week on more than two million cars recalled over foughty ignition switches. The worlds two biggest cement makers mastering in a 50 billion deal. And bill gates is urging wealthy chinese businessmen to give more money to charity. 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Its the nocategorygaming, nolookpassing, clearthelaneim goingupstrong, backboardbreaking, cash back card. This is the quicksilver cash back card from capital one. Unlimited 1. 5 cash back on every purchase, every single day. Ill ask again. Whats in your wallet . Pelley president obama announced last week that more than seven Million People have signed up for obamacare, but what went unsaid is that almost as many people have been left out. Millions of americans cant afford the new Health Insurance exchanges. For the sake of those people, obamacare told the states to expand medicaid, the Government Insurance for the very poor, but 24 states declined. So, in those states, nearly five Million People are falling into a gap they make too much to qualify as destitute for medicaid but not enough to buy insurance. We met some of these people when we tagged along in a busted rv called the health wagon, medical mercy for those left out of obamacare. The tight folds of the cumberland mountains mark the point of western virginia that splits kentucky and tennessee the very center of appalachia, a land rich in soft coal and hard times. Around wise county, folks are welcomed by storefronts to remember what life was like before unemployment hit 9 . Teresa gardner the roads are narrow and windy curves, so its not easy to drive the bus. Pelley this is Teresa Gardners territory. She cant be more than 5,4, but she muscles the bus through the hollers, deaf to the complaints of a 13yearold winnebago thats left its best miles behind it. Gardner having problems seeing here. Pelley you really cant see. The wipers are nearly shot and the defrosters out cold. There you go, you can see a little better now. laughs i understand theres a hole in the floorboard here somewhere . Gardner yes, its right over there, so dont get in that area. laughs pelley the old truck may be a ruin, but like most rvs, its pretty good at discovering america. Gardner and her partner, paula meade, are Nurse Practitioners aboard the health wagon, a charity that puts free healthcare on the road. How many patients do we have on the schedule today . He was going to see what he can free up for us. Pelley the health wagon pulls up in parking lots across six counties in southwestern virginia. Yall come on in out of the rain. Pelley its not long before the waiting room is packed. Hello, mr. Hank, how you doing . Pelley . And two exam rooms are full. With advanced degrees in nursing, gardner and meade are allowed to diagnose illnesses, write prescriptions, order tests and xrays. Stick it out, ah. Pelley on average, there are 20 patients a day; thats recently up by 70 . The health wagon is a small operation that started back in 1980. It runs mostly on federal grants, and corporate and private donations. Blood pressure a bit high before . Just when i get aggravated. Pelley who are these people who come into the van . Paula meade they are people that are in desperate need. They have no insurance, and they usually wait, we say, until they are train wrecks. Their blood pressures come in emergency levels. We have blood sugars come in 500, 600s because they cant afford their insulin. Pelley but why do they not see a doctor or a nurse before they become, as you call it, train wrecks . Meade because they dont have any money. They dont have money to p