Houston Chronicle

Long days grinding on search teams in Appalachia

- By Bruce Schreiner and Brynn Anderson

HINDMAN, Ky. — For days, a search-and-rescue team led by Phillip Dix has combed debrisclog­ged creek banks looking for survivors in flood-ravaged eastern Kentucky. His crew is used to the stifling heat and humidity but is laboring under the grind of 12-hour shifts spent pulling people from danger.

The scope of the devastatio­n and the conversati­ons with people who lost everything keeps the rescuers going, said Dix, who leads the Memphis, Tenn.-based team.

“It’s a job to us, but talking to the local people, that kind of brings it down to the human level, which our guys have to deal with,” Dix said Wednesday. “You can’t just turn that switch off when you’re talking to someone who’s lost everything they had.”

Nearly a week since floodwater­s consumed parts of Appalachia, rescue missions were winding down while supplies poured into what looms as a massive relief effort. Floodwater­s wrecked homes and businesses, and some escaped the surging waters with only the clothes they wore.

Initial expenditur­es from a relief fund opened by Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear were being distribute­d to pay funeral expenses of flood victims. The statewide death toll is 37, Beshear said.

Temperatur­es surged as people continued shoveling out from the wreckage. The rising heat and humidity meant heat index values were near 100 on Wednesday, a steam bath that will continue through Thursday evening, the National Weather Service said.

“The guys are tired,” Dix said from Knott County, where his crew resumed their mission on foot and boats. “So you’ve got to watch them, make sure they’re hydrated more than usual.”

That included tending to the dogs assisting the crews. The K-9s were being rotated to keep them from overheatin­g, said Deborah Burnett, a K-9 coordinato­r.

“We’re splashing some water on the dogs … just to keep them nice and hydrated,” she said.

Dix’s team rescued 16 people during a two-day stretch, he said. The rescued had no cell service, no electricit­y and no way out with roads and bridges damaged, and some were running short of food. The team reunited families but also found two bodies.

“The area that we were in, the houses were just gone,” Dix said. “These people … have lost everything they’ve got, (but) they still make it a point to thank us for being up here.”

Cooling centers were opened after forecaster­s warned of the risk of heat-related illnesses.

In Breathitt County, plans were made to deliver supplies by foot in areas where roads were washed out, County Judge-Executive Jeff Noble said.

“It just devastates me to see what pain people are going through,” he said. “My staff and workers, they’ve worked nonstop and they’re still working nonstop, and we’ll continue to do that until every holler is open and every road is open.”

More than 1,300 people have been rescued, and crews were still trying to reach some people cut off by floods or mudslides. About 5,000 customers still lacked electricit­y in eastern Kentucky, the governor said. Emergency shelters and area state parks housed hundreds of residents who fled homes that were destroyed or badly damaged. Many more are staying with relatives and friends.

More than 400 National Guardsmen have been deployed across the disaster area, which also includes parts of Virginia and West Virginia, delivering water and other relief. Beshear said water stations are set up every few miles along some roadways.

“Our goal is to provide so much water they (local officials) say ‘stop sending us water,’ ” he said.

 ?? Brynn Anderson/Associated Press ?? Rescuer Jackie Johnson and a K-9 named Crush search for survivors Wednesday in Carr Creek Lake near Hazard, Ky.
Brynn Anderson/Associated Press Rescuer Jackie Johnson and a K-9 named Crush search for survivors Wednesday in Carr Creek Lake near Hazard, Ky.

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