Los Angeles Times

Destructio­n’s path

Death toll reaches 18 in Montecito, and 7 remain unaccounte­d for as rescuers search for survivors

- BY CINDY CHANG, LOUIS SAHAGUN, JAMES QUEALLY AND MATT HAMILTON

Debris from San Ysidro Creek thrashed dozens of homes.

MONTECITO, Calif. — At least 18 people have died in the Montecito mudslides and seven people were still unaccounte­d for Friday, as hope waned that any survivors remained amid muck, boulders and toppled trees.

Rescuers continued to dig through the tangled wreckage of vehicles and homes, searching for human remains or survivors. Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown said crews had found another victim, 87-year-old Joseph Francis Bleckel, in his home in the Romero Canyon area about 11:30 a.m. Friday.

Bleckel had previously been listed as missing. The number missing has fluctuated widely in the aftermath of heavy rains that pounded the Thomas fire burn scar this week and unleashed a torrent of mud, boulders and debris that destroyed scores of homes.

Authoritie­s had said late Thursday that roughly 43 people were unaccounte­d for, but many of them have since been reported safe, said Chris Elms, a spokesman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. As of Friday evening, Santa Barbara County sheriff ’s officials had identified seven people who were still missing.

Elms said crews are still trying to fight their way through roadways made inaccessib­le by mudflow in the hopes of locating more people. Officials expanded mandatory evacuation zones Thursday because pedestrian­s and traffic were hindering rescue and repair operations.

Brown said that armored vehicles typically used by his SWAT team with barricaded suspects have been useful in reaching muddy areas where people were trapped. Most who had been stranded in their homes have been rescued, he said, including about 300 residents and staff members who were evacuated by rescue workers Thursday from the Casa Dorinda retirement home east of Olive Mill Road.

A Los Angeles Fire Department search and rescue team tried to sound an optimistic note — hoping for the best, bracing for the worst. Members used an arsenal of tools, technology and specially trained dogs to probe piles of debris more than 15 feet deep at the southern end of Romero Creek.

“It’s as exhausting, frustratin­g and tedious as looking for a needle in a haystack,” LAFD Battalion Chief Mark Akahoshi said, while hunched over a topographi­cal map of surroundin­g terrain studded with ranches and mansions offering panoramic views of the Pacific Ocean.

Highway 101, which had been tentativel­y scheduled to reopen Monday, will be closed indefinite­ly, said Capt. Cindy Pontes of the California

Highway Patrol. As of Friday evening, the highway was closed to northbound traffic from the Ventura-Santa Barbara county line to South Milpas Street in Santa Barbara, and closed to southbound traffic from South Milpas Street to Padaro Lane near Summerland.

Crews are working day and night to clear the road, but as they pump water away from the highway, more flows in, Pontes said.

Pontes said she flew over the 101 in a helicopter on Friday, and almost a mile of it was under water so deep that the center divider was not visible. More rain is expected at the end of next week.

Route 192, which cuts across the foothills of Montecito, is also unsafe to travel in places, and officials are trying to establish an alternate route as soon as possible, she said.

A Montecito Water District official said the water in all of Montecito remains unsafe to drink. Workers are replacing fire hydrants and reconnecti­ng water mains across creeks that were wiped out, but it is unknown when the system can be restarted, she said.

In the meantime, some residents have low pressure from their taps, and others have no water at all.

On Friday, Montecito Creek was back to its trickle amid a scene of destructio­n. Where the key artery of East Valley Road crosses the creek, houses had gaping holes in their sides. A white clapboard structure was wedged in the branches of a tree. Workers rushed to cut off the gas supply in the neighborho­od amid worries about dangerous leaks.

Carla Flynn, who lives along East Valley Road, spent Thursday morning shoveling mud as thick as peanut butter at the foot of her driveway. “I’m incredibly grateful to be alive,” she said.

When the storm hit, the sky lit up after tumbling rocks crashed into a gas line and ignited a fire in the hills. Mud pooled on the main thoroughfa­re outside her driveway, effectivel­y trapping her family inside.

Flynn is used to torrents gushing by — her property is alongside a creek — but nothing like this, she said. “I heard this crackling, like an ungodly crackling. Walls, fences breaking,” she said.

Her daughter has friends who are among the missing. Prominent community members have perished.

“You never think that it could happen here. This is such a sacred little oasis,” Flynn said.

‘It’s as exhausting, frustratin­g and tedious as looking for a needle in a haystack.’ — Mark Akahoshi, LAFD battalion chief

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? ORANGE COUNTY Urban Search and Rescue members wait for heavy equipment to peel back layers of debris amid the rubble of a home destroyed by Tuesday’s mudslides in Montecito, Calif.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ORANGE COUNTY Urban Search and Rescue members wait for heavy equipment to peel back layers of debris amid the rubble of a home destroyed by Tuesday’s mudslides in Montecito, Calif.
 ?? Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? SANTA FE SPRINGS firefighte­rs Paul Mackay, left, and Danny Drake look for access into homes along Ashley Road at Cold Springs Creek, which rose far above its banks and destroyed several homes after a storm sent mud and debris through Montecito...
Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times SANTA FE SPRINGS firefighte­rs Paul Mackay, left, and Danny Drake look for access into homes along Ashley Road at Cold Springs Creek, which rose far above its banks and destroyed several homes after a storm sent mud and debris through Montecito...
 ??  ?? A HOUSE on East Valley Road next to Cold Springs Creek near Parra Grande Lane shows the extent to which water rose above its banks, destroying several homes in Montecito neighborho­ods after the severe rainstorm.
A HOUSE on East Valley Road next to Cold Springs Creek near Parra Grande Lane shows the extent to which water rose above its banks, destroying several homes in Montecito neighborho­ods after the severe rainstorm.

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