News AP News The Latest: Rain hampers search for human remains after fire

The Latest: Rain hampers search for human remains after fire

Rain is hampering teams searching for remains of people in rubble left by the devastating fire that destroyed Paradise

The Latest: Rain hampers search for human remains after fire Image Source : APThe Latest: Rain hampers search for human remains after fire

CHICO, Calif. (AP) — The Latest on California wildfires (all times local):

11:15 a.m.

Rain is hampering teams searching for remains of people in rubble left by the devastating fire that destroyed Paradise.

Richard Ventura of Orange County's FEMA Urban Search and Rescue team said Thursday the rainy, windy, cold conditions are making the search process "miserable."

His team has 27 people involved in the effort.

Ventura says the rain "clumps things together" while making the terrain soggy and harder for workers to see and move.

Ventura says the workers are soaking wet and trying to keep their socks dry to avoid hypothermia.

The Orange County team is one of eight FEMA response teams in California that assists with disaster recovery.

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9:30 a.m.

Fire officials say rain is helping the fight against the deadliest blaze in California in the past century.

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said Thursday the fire that leveled Paradise is 90 percent contained two weeks after it started.

The blaze was 80 percent contained Wednesday before the first of three storm systems arrived in the area where at least 83 people died in the fire.

The first storm has moved on and another is expected later Thursday, raising concerns about mudslides and other problems.

Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea says more than 800 people will search the rubble for human remains on Thanksgiving.

Thousands of people displaced by the blaze will spend the holiday with family in the area or with strangers who open their homes for dinners put together by nonprofit groups.

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12:10 a.m.

Thousands of residents who lost their homes or their loved ones in a Northern California wildfire will spend Thanksgiving in unexpected situations and with unfamiliar faces.

The nonprofit World Central Kitchen is teaming up with businesses near the town of Paradise to provide 15,000 meals Thursday. And scores of people are opening their homes to share dinner with strangers who lost everything.

Others who fled the deadly wildfire are spending the holiday with family nearby.

The fire ignited Nov. 8 and devastated Paradise and surrounding communities. It has killed at least 83 people and destroyed more than 13,000 homes. Thousands of people remain evacuated.

Paradise Mayor Jody Jones says the community meals will be "a respite from the frantic activity of trying to put our lives back together and our town back together."

Disclaimer: This is unedited, unformatted feed from the Associated Press (AP) wire.