Search for wildfire victims continues in Maui

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Search and identification efforts were underway Saturday as teams worked tirelessly to find victims of the wildfires that scorched Maui on August 8, killing at least 111 people. - REUTERS
Transcript
00:00 Search and rescue teams with dogs and heavy equipment sifted through the charred remains
00:06 of Lahaina over the weekend as the search for victims continued in the aftermath of
00:10 wildfires that devastated Maui.
00:14 Task Force Leader Todd Magliocca said teams were searching every address for human remains.
00:19 "Big search area, devastating fire.
00:23 I've not seen anything like this in my entire 30 years in the fire service and been to some
00:31 pretty significant incidents.
00:33 The intensity, the population density, all those things combined have got us where we
00:39 are today."
00:40 Hawaii Governor Josh Green said on Friday that the death toll was still expected to
00:46 rise.
00:47 "There are now 470 search and rescue workers and 40 search dogs combing through the hundreds
00:52 of burned buildings and they've already completed searching more than 60 percent of the disaster
00:58 area.
01:00 The number of lives we have lost has climbed to over 100 and we expect it to increase each
01:05 day as we continue our search."
01:08 Green said the fast-moving Maui fire, fueled by wind gusts of up to 80 miles per hour,
01:13 destroyed more than 2,200 buildings and damaged roughly 500 more at an estimated cost of nearly
01:20 $6 billion.
01:22 Meanwhile the resort town's iconic banyan tree has been undergoing life-saving treatment
01:28 since the fire.
01:29 Arborist Stephen Nimms is leading the effort.
01:32 "We checked underneath the bark of all the lower trunks of the tree and we found that
01:38 there's still live tissue.
01:40 We didn't see any major charring or scarring of the tree.
01:44 It's kind of going into a holding stage.
01:47 So that's what I feel the tree's doing right now and what we're doing is just like someone
01:51 in a coma, they give them an intravenous shot.
01:54 Same way with the tree, we're giving it the intravenous shot with the aeration and the
01:59 treatments that we're doing right now."
02:01 Nimms said that while the historic tree is important to the community, he emphasized
02:06 that there are bigger priorities in Maui's recovery efforts.
02:09 "It's a treat.
02:10 We've got so many people that have lost their lives, lost their families, lost their livelihoods
02:16 and lost everything else here that I'm just saying is that that's where the focus should
02:22 be and we take care of that.
02:24 There's greater disasters out there than the tree."
02:27 [BLANK_AUDIO]

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