Boston Herald

Families search for kin missing in Calif. inferno

Rain threatens search for remains

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PARADISE, Calif. — Desperate families posted photos and messages on social media and at shelters in hopes of finding missing loved ones, many of them elderly, nearly two weeks after the deadliest, most destructiv­e wildfire in California history. The death toll stood at 77, with about 1,000 people unaccounte­d for.

“I have an uncle and two cousins that I have not been able to make contact with. Paul Williams, in his 90’s, his son Paul Wayne Williams, in his 70’s, and his daughter Gayle Williams in her 60’s,” one woman wrote on Facebook. “Any info would be appreciate­d.”

Hundreds of searchers continued looking for human remains in the ashes in Paradise and outlying areas ravaged by the blaze Nov. 8, with the body count increasing daily.

Rain in tomorrow’s forecast added urgency to the task: While it could help firefighte­rs knock down the flames, it could hinder the search by washing away fragmentar­y remains and turning ash into a thick paste.

Authoritie­s located hundreds of missing people and the list of unaccounte­d for dropped dramatical­ly Sunday from nearly 1,300 to 1,000. Social media pages gave updates on who was discovered dead and who was found safe.

Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea has said he put out the rough and incomplete list in hopes that many people would contact authoritie­s to say they are OK. More than a dozen people are listed as “unknowns,” without first or last names.

“The data we’re putting out is raw, but my thought on that was it’s better to work toward progress than achieve perfection before we start giving that informatio­n out,” he told ABC.

Robert James Miles, 58, lost the trailer he lived in in Paradise in the fire. He brought his 27-year-old son, Charlie, to a Federal Emergency Management Agency disaster center to meet with a mental health counselor.

“His main concern was getting Mama out, and it rattled him to the roots,” he said.

At the shelter Miles was staying in in Chico, people posted names of those they hadn’t heard from. Miles said he alerted a Red Cross worker Saturday that he recognized eight names on the board as friends and knew they were OK.

“Two of them were in the shelter,” he said with a chuckle.

The fire, which burned at least 234 square miles and destroyed nearly 12,000 homes, reported was twothirds contained yesterday.

 ?? AP ?? DAY BY DAY: Tammy Lee Trojanowsk­i, 46, holds her chihuahua-dachshund outside the Federal Emergency Management center in Chico, Calif., as she talks about the Camp Fire disaster.
AP DAY BY DAY: Tammy Lee Trojanowsk­i, 46, holds her chihuahua-dachshund outside the Federal Emergency Management center in Chico, Calif., as she talks about the Camp Fire disaster.

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