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Landslide Threat Leads To Evacuations Near Rattlesnake Ridge

Officials in Yakima County, Washington, are strongly urging residents living below a shifting mountainside near Union Gap to evacuate. 



A huge crack that appeared on Rattlesnake Ridge last year is beginning to widen.

Firefighters are going door-to-door asking about 50 residents who live on the south side of the mountain to leave their homes. They are offering hotel rooms and places to board residents' animals

https://youtu.be/7DATFoizswY

The earth below the crack in Rattlesnake Ridge had been moving about one foot per week, but is now moving about 1.4 feet per week.

There is "no definitive answer as to if or when significant movement of the slide will occur or how far the slide will travel," according to a Yakima Valley Office of Emergency Management press release. But experts monitoring the slide believe that since it is "slow moving and on a gentle slope that the landslide event will be small in nature and hopefully stabilize itself," the release said.

But other geologists believe the outcome might be worse. According to Bruce Bjornstad, an expert in the geology of the Columbia Valley, a massive slide could cover I-82 and even dam parts of the Yakima River.

Officials have closed Thorp Road and are positioning shipping containers along Interstate 82 to try to keep any falling rocks or debris off the highway.

The Washington Department of Transportation is monitoring the area and has placed signs along the highway warning motorists of potential for rockfall.

Since this satellite picture was taken, a scary-looking crack has cleaved the hillside above the quarry. Emergency officials are concerned it could turn into a major slide event.
/ Google Maps
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Google Maps
Since this satellite picture was taken, a scary-looking crack has cleaved the hillside above the quarry. Emergency officials are concerned it could turn into a major slide event.

Copyright 2018 Northwest News Network

Anna King
Anna King calls Richland, Washington home and loves unearthing great stories about people in the Northwest. She reports for the Northwest News Network from a studio at Washington State University, Tri-Cities. She covers the Mid-Columbia region, from nuclear reactors to Mexican rodeos.