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Rescue crews search for survivors after massive Washington mudslide

Rescue crews are searching for survivors after a massive landslide of dirt, trees and rocks in rural Washington killed three people, injured at least eight othe...
Handout of officials surveying a large mudslide near Oso, Washington

Rescue crews are searching for survivors after a massive landslide of dirt, trees and rocks in rural Washington killed three people, injured at least eight others and destroyed six houses.

Snohomish County Fire District 21 Chief Travis Hots told reporters late Saturday that crews could hear voices from the debris field pleading for help. It was not immediately clear how many people might still be alive.  “We have people who are yelling for our help, and we are going to take extreme risks,” Hots said. “This is still a rescue mission until we determine otherwise.”

Shari Ireton, a spokesperson for the Snohomish County Sheriff’s office, said rescuers were using thermal imaging cameras to help try to find people. The slide — at least 135 feet wide and 180 feet deep — hit just before 11 a.m. Saturday and completely blocked State Route 530 near the town of Oso, about 55 miles north of Seattle. Also blocked was the North Fork of the Stillaguamish River, and there were concerns about possible downstream flooding affecting more homes.

Residents both upstream and downstream from the slide were being asked to prepare to leave at a moment’s notice, Snohomish County spokeswoman Bronlea Mishler said. “We are not issuing an evacuation order,” she said. “However, we need residents living along the river to be prepared. Conditions are changing very rapidly.”

The Snohomish County Sheriff’s Department initially reported that two people had been killed. Authorities said later that one of the people who was rescued died at a hospital. The injured included a 6-month-old infant, Ireton said. People were transported to a nearby hospital, as well as medical facilities to the north in Skagit County and to the south in Seattle.

Five of the injured were brought to Cascade Valley Hospital in Arlington, but one has already been treated and released, said hospital spokeswoman Jennifer Egger. The facility was expecting more injured people, but Egger said she didn’t know how many and couldn’t comment on the condition of those already at the hospital because they were still being evaluated.

“We’re on standby waiting to see what happens next,” Egger said. The American Red Cross has set up at the hospital and is seeking donations of food, water, blankets and clothing, Egger said. An evacuation shelter has been set up at Post Middle School in Arlington.

SOURCE: Fox News;  http://fxn.ws/ONvYxP

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