The key highway along the California coast has been cleared of debris and is a few days from reopening while the search is widening from three people still missing after a massive mudslide, authorities said Friday.
U.S. Highway 101 has been cleaned of mud in Santa Barbara County, and workers are now clearing drainage areas and stabilizing embankments so it can reopen, Tim Gubbins of the California Department of Transportation said. Officials should know by Saturday whether they can meet their goal of a Monday reopening, but for now Gubbins would only say it would be open in the next few days.
Meanwhile, more than a dozen new teams of search dogs are set to arrive Saturday to join hundreds of firefighters in the search for three people still missing since the Jan. 9 slide. They are 2-year-old Lydia Sutthithepa, 17-year-old John Cantin and 28-year-old Fabiola Calderon.
"We're searching deeper, we're searching wider," said Anthony Stornetta, a county fire battalion chief.
The three missing people are all from the same Olive Mill neighborhood of Montecito, where dogs and their handlers have been getting stuck in mud as they search, Sheriff Bill Brown said.