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Prayer need: Over 100 missing person reports filed in Wash. mudslide, as death...

Michie

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...toll rises to 14



Over 100 missing person reports filed in Wash. mudslide, as death toll rises to 14 | Fox News
 

Boss_BlueAngels

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The Snohomish County Helicopter Rescue Team has been leading the rescue and recovery efforts throughout this disaster. Back in December I was asked to document the teams efforts through my photography and videography. Last month I began flying with the team. Friday, the day before this landslide took place, I was asked to join the team on REAL missions, not just training.

Not only has the situation been heartbreaking, but knowing all the rescuers so well has made it completely surreal for me. I've been in absolute awe of the work they do and the incredible individuals they all are, volunteering their time for our community. I've been on several training flights in different terrain, weather conditions, and rescue techniques, with them, including a few night training missions where I got to use night vision goggles.

There hasn't been a day since hearing this that's gone by with dry eyes, especially seeing these incredible individuals giving press conferences and answering questions for the media and trying to keep it together. Such amazing people. Rescue missions present their own share of emotional challenges, but having to conduct so many in a short period of time and then so many body recoveries is absolutely crushing.

If there is ANY good that comes from this tragedy, it's public awareness of this program. You see, the federal government has cut its funding to this program, and the volunteers have scrambled to launch a fundraising campaign to keep this team flying and saving lives in the future... At least until a more permanent solution can be found. That's where I come in. My work with the team is supposed to provide photos, videos, articles, etc. to bring awareness to the community. Up until recent events, the majority of folks in the region wrote this resource off as ONLY a mountain/wilderness rescue service which had no real purpose for the community at large.

If anyone questioned the importance of this team, this video answers without a doubt how crucial they are.

Young Boy from Oso on Vimeo
 
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StevenMerten

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Risk of slide ‘unforeseen’? Warnings go back decades

By Ken Armstrong, Mike Carter and Mike Baker, Seattle Times

Since the 1950s, geological reports on the hill that buckled during the weekend in Snohomish County have included pessimistic analyses and the occasional dire prediction. But no language seems more prescient than what appears in a 1999 report filed with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, warning of “the potential for a large catastrophic failure.”

That report was written by Daniel J. Miller and his wife, Lynne Rodgers Miller. When she saw the news of the mudslide Saturday, she knew right away where the land had given way. Her husband knew, too.

“We’ve known it would happen at some point,” he told The Seattle Times on Monday. “We just didn’t know when.”

Daniel Miller, a geomorph[bless and do not curse]ologist, also documented the hill’s landslide conditions in a report written in 1997 for the Washington Department of Ecology and the Tulalip Tribes. He knows the hill’s history, having collected reports and memos from the 1950s, 1960s, 1980s and 1990s. He has a half-dozen manila folders stuffed with maps, slides, models and drawings, all telling the story of an unstable hillside that has defied efforts to shore it up.

That’s why he could not believe what he saw in 2006, when he returned to the hill within weeks of a landslide that crashed into and plugged the North Fork of the Stillaguamish River, creating a new channel that threatened homes on a street called Steelhead Drive. Instead of seeing homes being vacated, he saw carpenters building new ones.

Report: Warnings of Washington mudslide go back decades | Gretawire
 
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