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Engineers spent Monday assessing each of the structures in the evacuated area, while fire officials escorted some families to retrieve belongings from the neighborhood. At least seven homes would likely remain vacant for an extended period, said Fire District Chief Nim Kidd, who is also the head of the city's emergency management office. Kenny Crawford, 32, asked fire officials to be allowed to retrieve his car and some belongings on Monday, but because his home is directly below the disintegrating wall, he and his girlfriend were told it was too dangerous. "They really haven't given us any info," Crawford said. "We don't know what's going to happen. Of course, property values are going to fall." Dolenga said geologists and engineers were looking for a cause of the slide and monitoring for any additional movement of the dirt that was sliding at a rate of 4-inches-an-hour on Sunday. She did not know if there was additional movement on Monday. Utilities were cut off in the area, and construction crews were moving dirt to shore up the homes on the hill and to protect those below the retaining wall.
Resident Lakeika James, 41, said she had noticed odd noises over the three years she has lived in her house. "I would hear, laying in my bed at night, grumbling and vibrations. A few nails popped out lately," she said. She said she hadn't planned on staying in the house long-term, and now after the landslide, the mother of a 5-year-old girl wants out. "I'm just going to be uncomfortable and worried for my family," she said.
[Associated
Press;
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