JUNEAU, Alaska — A local economic development official and a woman who rents an apartment from him have been identified as the two people missing after a landslide as wide as two football fields slammed into a neighborhood in Haines, Alaska, the mayor said Thursday.
The home of David Simmons, interim executive director of the Haines Economic Development Corp., was among the four houses destroyed when the landslide came down Wednesday, Haines Borough Mayor Douglas Olerud said. Jenae Larson was renting an apartment above Simmons' garage, he said.
Officials initially said six people were missing, but the count was narrowed Thursday morning. Alaska State Troopers said the other four individuals were located safe. Troopers previously said about 9 feet (2.7 meters) of mud and trees covered the area.
The search for survivors was suspended Wednesday night because of unstable ground in the slide area.
There were numerous smaller slides in the community of about 2,500 people as heavy rains battered much of southeast Alaska.
The National Weather Service said Haines received up to 10 inches (25 centimeters) of rain in the last two days. Jeremy Zidek, a spokesperson for the Alaska Division of Emergency Management and Homeland Security, said 12 of the 30 communities they contacted in southeast Alaska reported some type of damage from the storm, ranging from dangerous mudslides to flooded basements.
Rescue crews from Juneau traveled about 100 miles (161 km) north to Haines on Thursday morning, and others were expected throughout the day, troopers said.
The ground remained unstable, and crews were trying to assess the area "while still protecting everybody, and so we don't have a bigger incident than we currently have," Olerud said.