Prospects grim as Edmonton rescuers work to free buried man - Action News
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Edmonton

Prospects grim as Edmonton rescuers work to free buried man

Firefighters, paramedics and police converged on a work-site around 5 p.m. Tuesday where a man lay buried under several feet of dirt and clay.

'Im not going to say hes deceased or anything yet,' says district fire chief on scene

Firefighters, paramedics and police on the scene Tuesday evening where a man lay buried under several feet of dirt and clay at a home construction site. (CBC)

Rescue crews battled the clock Tuesday evening in an effort to free a construction workerburied for hoursunder several feet of dirt and clay.

As of 10:30 p.m.,the man had been buried for more than five hours, and hopes were dwindling thathe would be found alive.

He was working with a backhoe operator digging a trench at a home construction site near107thAvenue and124thStreet. The trench collapsed just before 5 p.m. and soon firefighters, paramedics and police converged on the scene.

Desperate hours passed as rescue crews worked to shore up the sides of the trench.

"I'm not going to say he's deceased or anything yet," district fire chief Doug MacDonald said earlier in the evening."But he's probably 10 feet down, with five or six feet of clay and dirt on top of him."

The backhoe was digging a trench to lay sewerpipes for a new home, MacDonald said.

Firefighters had a technical rescue team on the scene, shoring up the sides so nothing more would collapse.

"It's very unstable and it's hard clay," MacDonald said. "It's just a matter of everyone staying safe."

Asked before 7 p.m. whetherthe effort was a rescue or a recovery, he said: "It's still a rescue."

But several hours have passed since then and crews have still not reached the man.

Occupational Health and Safety workers were also on scene.