The Standard (St. Catharines)

Families wait anxiously

Rescue workers slog through mud searching for victims of deadly mudslides in California

- MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ and ROBERT JABLON

MONTECITO, Calif. — Hundreds of rescue workers slogged through knee-deep ooze and used long poles to probe for bodies Thursday as the search dragged on for victims of the mudslides that slammed the wealthy coastal town. Seventeen people were confirmed dead and eight others were missing.

Family members anxiously awaited word on loved ones who hadn’t been heard from since the onslaught early Tuesday.

“It’s just waiting and not knowing, and the more I haven’t heard from them — we have to find them,” said Kelly Weimer, whose elderly parents’ home was wrecked. The couple, Jim and Alice Mitchell, did not heed a voluntary evacuation warning and stayed home to celebrate Jim Mitchell’s 89th birthday.

Santa Barbara County authoritie­s sent a shudder through the community early Thursday when they reported that the number of people unaccounte­d for had surged from 16 to 48. But later in the morning, they said they had made a clerical error, and the actual number of missing was down to eight.

As search dogs clambered on heaps of wood that used to be homes, mud-spattered rescue teams from all over California worked their way through the ruins of Montecito, an enclave of 9,000 people northwest of Los Angeles.

It was left covered with thick muck, boulders, wrecked cars, splintered lumber and tree limbs in a scene Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown likened to a First World War battlefiel­d.

After a better look at the damage, officials lowered the number of destroyed homes from 100 to 59 and raised the number of damaged ones from 300 to 446.

Overall, 28 people were injured. Twelve remained hospitaliz­ed, four in critical condition.

By Wednesday, some 500 searchers had covered about 75 per cent of the inundated area, authoritie­s said. They had a long slog ahead, filled with hazards seen and unseen.

“A lot of the street signs are gone, the roads are impassable. It all has to be done on foot,” said Deputy Dan Page, chief of a Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department rescue team.

Rescue crews worked up to 12 hours a day and risked stepping on nails or shattered glass, or being exposed to raw sewage, or dealing with leaking gas, Page said.

“We’ve gotten multiple reports of rescuers falling through manholes that were covered with mud, swimming pools that were covered up with mud,” said Anthony Buzzerio, a Los Angeles County fire battalion chief.

“The mud is acting like a candy shell on ice cream. It’s crusty on top but soft underneath, so we’re having to be very careful.”

Crews marked where bodies were found, often far away from a home, and used that informatio­n to guess where other victims might have ended up as the surging mud carried or buried them.

The mudslides were already occurring when Santa Barbara County officials first sent emergency alerts to cellphones in the area, the Los Angeles Times reported Thursday.

For days, the county had issued repeated warnings via social media, news media and emails about the potential for mudslides. But county emergency manager Jeff Gater said officials decided not to use the cellphone push alert system until 3:50 a.m. Tuesday out of concern it might not be taken seriously.

Only an estimated 10 to 15 per cent of residents fled when ordered, and much of the damage occurred where evacuation­s were voluntary.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Firefighte­rs search for people trapped after mudslides in Montecito, Calif. At least 17 people have died after torrential rains unleashed mudslides on Tuesday.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES Firefighte­rs search for people trapped after mudslides in Montecito, Calif. At least 17 people have died after torrential rains unleashed mudslides on Tuesday.

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