A month after deadly Maui fire, 66 people still missing
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[September 09, 2023]
By Jonathan Allen
(Reuters) -A month after a ferocious fire razed a town in Maui, 66
people remained unaccounted for as workers continued to remove toxic
debris from the burn site, a process that could take almost a year,
Hawaii Governor Josh Green said on Friday.
The official death toll of the Aug. 8 fire that left the historic town
of Lahaina in charred ruins still stands at 115 people, a number
unchanged in more than two weeks.
Only 60 of those victims had been identified as of Thursday, according
to the Maui Police Department.
Officials have said some victims may have been cremated in the blaze,
leaving no remains to recover; a final death toll is uncertain, as is
the future of the land where Lahaina stood.
Earlier in September, county and federal officials circulated a list of
more than 380 people still unaccounted for; by Friday, the list had been
reduced to 66 people, the governor said in remarks broadcast online.
While some families wait in limbo, relatives of those confirmed dead
face additional difficulties.
Tim Laborte's stepfather, Joseph Lara, was killed in the fire, his body
found a short drive from Lara's house in his native Lahaina. Now the
family are trying to piece together whether a mortgage is owed on Lara's
ruined property and what kind of insurance polices he held.
"His affairs are a mess," Laborte said. "He didn't have a will, he
didn't have a trust."
The family have tried to get Lara's remains released from a temporary
morgue, but Laborte said they had been told that none would be released
until officials were sure the burn area had been cleared of all human
remains, and that obtaining a death certificate could take months.
Hawaii's Department of Health, which issues death certificates in the
state, did not respond to questions about how officials are certifying
the fire's victims.
Survivors of the fire have not been allowed to return to survey the
ruins of their homes and businesses, though some have managed to make
their way in on brief forays.
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Combined Joint Task Force 50 (CJTF-50) search, rescue and recovery
personnel conduct search operations of areas damaged by Maui
wildfires in Lahaina, Hawaii, U.S. August 15, 2023. U.S. Army
National Guard/Staff Sgt. Matthew A. Foster/Handout via REUTERS THIS
IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY/File Photo
The governor said on Friday that residents and business-owners would
soon be allowed to go into the burn zone on scheduled supervised
visits.
"The ash, we are told, is quite toxic, so we need to be careful,"
Green said.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers are leading the removal of toxic debris from Lahaina, a
clean-up that Green said would take "the better part of a year" and
cost about $1 billion.
The state was asking the owners of short-term rental properties on
the island to consider renting their properties long-term to people
left homeless by the fire, and was speaking with several hotels
about leasing their entire properties for the displaced, Green said.
More than 6,000 survivors of the fire are still sheltering in hotel
rooms, Green said. The Federal Emergency Management Agency was
helping the state provide housing grants and rental assistance for
displaced people for the next 18 months, he said.
Lahaina was built along the shore where Maui's western volcano
slopes down into the Pacific Ocean, and it was the former seat of
the Hawaiian Kingdom before becoming a popular tourist destination.
How it might be rebuilt remains unclear.
"The people of Maui must have as much time as they need to heal and
recover and will begin to rebuild only when they are ready," Green
said. "I want to emphasize this again: The land in the Lahaina is
reserved for its people as they return and rebuild."
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen in New York; Editing by Stephen Coates)
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