Politics & Government

L.A. Firefighters on Standby to Help in Ecuador Quake Rescue Efforts

Search dogs, their handlers and other specialized crews from Los Angeles are often sent by the U.S. government to overseas quakes.

LOS ANGELES, CA - Firefighters from the Los Angeles County Fire Department are on alert to scramble to Ecuador on Sunday, in the aftermath of the earthquake that killed at least 238 people.

The 7.8-magnitude earthquake hit the central Ecuador coast Saturday, leveling buildings and rupturing roadways, according to news reports. A national state of emergency was declared today.

Los Angeles County firefighters are on standby to assist in the rescue efforts, but the call to get to an aiport had not arrived by midday, said spokesman Randall Wright.

Find out what's happening in South Pasadenafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The alert is in effect only for the Ecuador earthquake, though it may be expanded to include the back-to-back quakes that shook southern Japan last week, killing at least 42 people, Wright said.

Search dogs, their handlers and other specialized crews from Los Angeles and Fairfax County, Virginia are often sent by the U.S. government to overseas quakes.

Find out what's happening in South Pasadenafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

In 2015, the teams arrived in Nepal three days after the devastating mega-quake there, and the L.A. crews pulled a teenager alive from rubble five days after he was trapped there.

--City News Service, photo credit: César Muñoz/AgenciaAndes/Wiki Commons

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