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Camp Fire search efforts intensify with more than 600 people reported missing

The death toll from the Camp Fire rose to 63 people and the number of people missing spiked to more than 600.
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(CNN) — As the death toll from the Camp Fire rose to 63 people and the number of people missing spiked to more than 600, rescue workers searching for human remains in the wreckage hope hundreds of people who are still unaccounted for after the blaze are still alive.

“A lot of people are displaced, and a lot of people don’t know we’re looking for them,” Butte County Sheriff and Coroner Kory Honea said late Thursday.

The dramatic rise in the number of unaccounted for came after authorities combed through a week of 911 calls and incident reports. Combined with relatives who have reported loved ones missing, investigators are now looking into reports of 631 people who are possibly missing.

“You have to understand, this is a dynamic list,” Honea said. “Some days might be less people, some days might be more people, but my hope at the end of the day, we have accounted for everybody. ”

A week after two major wildfires sparked at both ends of the Golden State, the total death toll has increased to 66, fire officials said.

The Camp Fire — now the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in the state — has left 63 people dead, destroyed about 9,700 homes and scorched 141,000 acres. By Thursday night, it was 40% contained.

Hundreds of deputies, National Guard troops and coroners are sifting through leveled homes and mangled cars for human remains.

“They are going to be searching vehicles that have been burned. They’ll be searching residences that have been burned. Checking around the residences … our mission is to find the victims from this fire, recover them and get them identified and notify the families to give them some answers,” Butte County Sheriff’s Investigations Sgt. Steve Collins said.

President Donald Trump is expected to visit the region Saturday as firefighters continue battling the blaze.

More than 230,000 acres burned in California in the past week. That’s larger than the cities of Chicago and Boston combined. And in 30 days, firefighters have battled more than 500 blazes, said Cal Fire, the state’s forestry and fire protection agency.

The number of names on the missing list for the Camp Fire soared Thursday, but authorities say they are still struggling to confirm whether all of them are still unaccounted.

The cell phone service is unreliable and evacuees have not reached out to relatives and others don’t know they were reported missing.

Housing shortage

Families who lost their homes in the fires are going to have a very hard time finding a place to live, Butte County Housing Authority Executive Director Ed Mayer said.

“We just had 10% of our county’s housing stock erased in one day; it’s hard to convey the significance of that,” he said.

A Walmart in Chico has a parking lot full of vehicles, including motor homes, in which people are living, often running the heat in their cars and trucks all night. Other people are staying in tents.

“It’s been a week and people have been great, but I don’t know how long it’s going to last,” Mayer said. “Short-term, we are fine, but long-term we are not.”

One of the selling points of Paradise was its affordable housing, but that’s been erased, Mayer said.

“And there is nothing to replace it” for low-income families, he said.

Adding to the misery for evacuees, officials confirmed an outbreak of norovirus at a shelter in Chico that has sickened 21 people. The stomach bug causes vomiting, nausea and diarrhea.

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