Searchers step up efforts to beat rain
CHICO, Calif. — Searchers combing a Northern California town levelled by a deadly wildfire stepped up their efforts Sunday ahead of rains forecast later this week in the fire zone where 76 bodies have been recovered so far.
While the rain would help tamp down the blaze, it could also turn the area into a muddy mess and hinder efforts to find the remains of more victims in the town of Paradise.
Authorities said late Saturday that 1,300 names remain on a list of people who are unaccounted for more than a week after the fire began in Butte County. Authorities stressed the long roster does not mean they believe all are missing.
Sheriff Kory Honea pleaded with evacuees to review the list of those reported as unreachable by family and friends and to call the department if they are safe.
Deputies have located hundreds of people to date, but the overall number keeps growing because they are adding more names, including those from the chaotic early hours of the disaster, Honea said.
“Anytime you add a new element — rain, wind, all those kinds of things — you start disturbing things, spreading things around,” Honea said. “As much as I wish that we could get through all of this before the rains come, I don’t know if that’s possible.”
Honea said it was within the “realm of possibility” that officials would never know the exact death toll from the blaze.
Hundreds of search and recovery personnel from around the state are working to find remains, going to homes when they receive tips that someone might have died there.
But they are also doing a more comprehensive, “door-to-door” and “car-to-car” search of areas, said Joe Moses, a commander with the Monterey County Sheriff’s Office, who is helping oversee the search and rescue effort.
The search area is huge, Moses said, with many structures that need to be checked.
The fire also burned many places to the ground, creating a landscape unique to many search-and- rescue personnel.