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Tallying losses of deadly Maui wildfires still in early stages, officials say

Searchers with cadaver dogshavebeen going from building to building in the west Maui community of Lahaina, looking for victims of devastating wildfires on the Hawaiian island, as officials tally the loss of life anddestruction of property.

Confirmed death toll rises to 96, with cost to rebuild estimated at nearly $6B US

Lahaina resident describes 'horrific' experience of fleeing wildfire

1 year ago
Duration 5:44
Alicia Mohondro lost her home in the wildfire that tore through the western Maui community of Lahaina. She says she received no warnings before she was forced to flee amid heavy smoke and flames and hopes the disaster will lead to a change in the alert system. 'The fire was so fast, it was a matter of seconds,' she says.

Searchers with cadaver dogshavebeen going through the remains of buildings in the west Maui community of Lahaina, looking for victims ofdevastating wildfires on the Hawaiian island, as officials tally the loss of life anddestruction of property.

The number of confirmed deaths rose to 96over the weekend, according to Maui County, making it the deadliest U.S. wildfirein more than a century, surpassing the toll of a2018 wildfire in northern California thatleft 85 dead.

Hawaii Gov. JoshGreen said the toll is expected to continue to rise, noting that efforts to find and identify the dead were still in the early stages.

"We are prepared for many tragic stories," Green told CBS Morningsin a recorded interview that was aired Monday. "They will find 10 to 20 people per day, probably, until they finish. And it's probably going to take 10 days. It's impossible to guess, really."

As cell phone service has slowly been restored, Green had said that the number of people missing dropped to about 1,300, from over 2,000.

WATCH |'Everything is gone,' says Hawaii resident who lost home to wildfires:

Maui wildfire recovery efforts met with frustration, grief

1 year ago
Duration 5:56
Residents who lost everything in wildfires on Maui say theyre frustrated by a lack of information, government support and access to whats left of their homes.

Twenty cadaver dogs and dozens of people are making their way through blocks reduced to ash.

"Right now, they're going street by street, block by blockbetween cars, and soon they'll start to enter buildings," Jeff Hickman, the director of public affairs for the Hawaii Department of Defense, said Monday on NBC's Today.

Maui Police Chief John Pelletier said crews have covered just three per cent of the search area.

Pelletiersaid very fewbodies have been identified because the remains are badly damaged by a fire hot enough to melt metal. He called on relatives of the missing to undergo DNA testingto help identify remains.

"We've got an area that we have to contain that is at least fivesquare miles and it is full of our loved ones," noting that the death toll is likely to grow and "none of us really know the size of it yet."

Emotions running high

"The community is reeling right now,"Nicholas Winfrey, president of Maui United Way told CBC News on Sunday, speaking fromWailuku.

In the last few days, Winfrey said, "it's beenan explosion of individuals coming together in every form and fashion to try to support in any way they can."

WATCH | U.S.National Guard arrives to take part in search:

Lahaina family grateful for support after losing home in wildfires

1 year ago
Duration 5:25
'That Hawaiian aloha is real,' says Erik Naylor, who is staying in a house about 30 minutes outside of Lahaina after he and his family fled the wildfires. Naylor says he's grateful for the help finding places for his family to stay, but expressed concern about the hardships facing other community members.

"But really, in all honesty, it's devastation, it's moments of levity, it's toughness, but it's also the aloha spirit, which has been here longer than I have been here, of people coming together to do anything that they can to support those in need."

Many of the survivors took to Sunday church services, including Akanesi Vaa,38,who said her family got stuck in traffic while trying to escape the flames.

Vaa, her husband and her children, aged 15, 13 and nine,resorted to fleeing on foot and jumping a fence to safety. Along the way, she said, an elderly woman pleading for help handed her a baby to care for. The woman and her husband were also able to make it over the fence.

"I think a lot of us needed to hear today's message," Vaa said after attending church at King's Cathedral in Kahului. "All these ashes are going to turn into beauty. I knowLahainawill come back 10 times stronger."

Scott Landis, pastor at Keawala'i Church, a United Church of Christ congregation in Makena, said an unusually large crowd of 100 people showed, nearly double what he would have expected on a typical Sunday in August.

"They were really listening. You could tell people were here, looking for a word of hope," Landis said.

Among them were people who have family and friends unaccounted for, and they are "fearing the worst,"he added.

WATCH | 'The sun was blotted out,' says Lahaina resident who escaped fires:

'The needs are pretty drastic' in Maui after wildfires, aid worker says

1 year ago
Duration 1:22
Carl Ladd, vice president of Mercy Chefs Global, says 'it's hard to put into words' what he's seen in Maui where he and his non-profit organization are helping feed first responders and survivors of the devastating wildfires.

Damages estimates sit near $6B US

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)pegged an early estimate of the damageat $5.52 billion US,while Green said it was nearing $6 billion US across the island.

At least 2,700 buildings were damaged or destroyed in west Maui, Greensaid, a large majorityof which were residential. He said it would take an "incredible amount of time to recover."

About 4,500people have beenleft homeless, the governor said. However,officials have secured 1,000 hotel rooms for displaced locals andFEMA personnel. More than 1,400people havebeen taken in at emergency shelters.

Among those helpingis Celine Scarlet, a Canadian who is living in Maui. She's working at the missing person's desk at one of the shelters,where emotions are high.

"We had little moments of pure joy, telling people that their loved ones have been found, and moments of despair, when the people,we had to tell them they hadn't been located," she told CBC News.

Hawaii's governor tours the town in Maui hit by a wildfire.
Hawaii Gov. Josh Green, left, and Maui County Mayor Richard Bissen Jr. speak during a tour of wildfire damage in Lahaina, Hawaii, on Saturday. (Rick Bowmer/The Associated Press)

Hawaii emergency management records do not indicate thatwarning sirens sounded before the fire hit Lahaina.Officials sent alerts to cellphones, televisions and radio stations, but widespread power and cellular outages may have limited their reach.

The power outages were expected to last several weeks in west Maui.

Fuelled by a dry summer and strong winds from a passing hurricane, the wildfires on Maui raced through parched brush covering the island and swept into Lahaina on Tuesday.

WATCH | Aid worker in Kahului says disaster relief showsbest of humanity:

'Everything is gone,' says Hawaii resident who lost home to wildfires

1 year ago
Duration 7:36
'There's hundreds if not thousands of people that have no housing,' says Mindy Barrett, whose home was destroyed in the wildfires.

Green said officials will review policies and procedures toimprove safety.

"People have asked why we are reviewing what's going on, and it'sbecause the world has changed. A storm now can be a hurricane-fire ora fire-hurricane," Green said. "That's what we experienced. That'swhy we're looking into these policies, to find out how we can bestprotect our people."

"It outpaced anything firefighters could have done in the early hours," U.S. Fire Administrator Lori Moore-Merrell saidSaturday, adding that it moved horizontally, structure to structure, and "incredibly fast."

WATCH |Hundreds of Canadians return from Maui with stories of devastation:

Hundreds of Canadians return from Maui with stories of devastation

1 year ago
Duration 2:03
Canadian evacuees from Maui arrive with stories of complete devastation, loss of life and property.

With files from The Associated Press and Reuters

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