New York Daily News

MUD TOLL RISES

20 dead in deluged Calif.

- BY ELIZABETH ELIZALDE and LEONARD GREENE A section of California’s crucial Highway 101 is buried in mud (main photo) as a firefighte­r searches a destroyed home in Montecito for victims (above). With News Wire Services

A SOMBER candleligh­t vigil Sunday drew thousands of people who paid tribute to victims of devastatin­g mudslides that have already killed at least 20 people in a Southern California town ravaged by water and muck.

Mourners gathered outside the Santa Barbara County courthouse, where they lit candles, said prayers and left flowers at a makeshift memorial for the victims.

Sunday also saw crews manning earth-moving machines in Montecito as they attacked mounds of mud, boulders and debris in hopes of finding four people still missing in the murky mess.

Authoritie­s discovered the body of 30-year-old Pinit Sutthithep­a Saturday while recovery crews continued their search for the missing after the mudslides began devastatin­g the enclave on Tuesday.

Sutthithep­a’s 2-year-old daughter, Lydia, was still missing, but his 6-year-old son and his 79-year-old father-in-law died in the mudslides.

“Tonight, we need to mourn,” Santa Barbara County Supervisor Das Williams said. “It is breathtaki­ngly horrible. Our community is going through something it has never gone through.”

More than 2,000 searchers and recovery workers combed the area after a powerful storm swept in from the Pacific and inundated the mountain slopes with enough rainfall to create a deadly avalanche of mud and debris.

The area was recently ravaged by wind-driven wildfires that included the Thomas Fire, the state’s biggest on record, that left hillsides in places like Montecito barren and vulnerable for the destructio­n brought by the first downpours of the region’s rainy season.

Crews were racing the clock, with long-range forecasts predicting more rain — and potential new mudslides — within the week. Meteorolog­ists said Friday’s expected rain could be followed by more precipitat­ion two days later.

Residents wanting to pray for themselves and their neighbors were forced to attend worship services in nearby towns.

“Our whole community is devastated,” Hannah Miller said at the Trinity Episcopal Church. “There isn’t anyone who doesn’t know someone who has been affected by this disaster. It is truly awful. We can just pray they find those poor missing people.”

Santa Barbara County Fire Chief Eric Peterson spoke about the difficulti­es and challenges emergency responders face in their search for survivors.

“I have felt the heartbreak of knowing that even with all of your skill and all of your training and all of your planning, you couldn’t save everybody,” he said.

“No one could have planned for the size and scope of what a 200-year storm immediatel­y following our largest wildfire could bring.”

State crews continued to work Sunday to clear a 2-mile stretch of freeway that was expected to reopen Monday but likely won’t. Officials said they struggled with the work because the road sits at one of the lowest points in the city and continues to draw water and mud.

The mudslides have destroyed at least 65 homes and damaged over 460, according to officials.

Those killed in the mudslides were all Montecito residents, ranging in age from 3 to 89, authoritie­s said.

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