Two days after rapidly spreading wildfires began rcing through areas of the island of Maui in Hawaii, families and friends are still hoping to hear from missing loved ones. 

Hawaii Gov. Josh Green said Thursday 53 people had died and the death toll will likely continue to rise. Search and rescue operations were continuing, Green said.

More than 1,000 structures were destroyed by fires that are still burning in Lahaina and surrounding areas. “Lahaina, with a few rare exceptions, has been burned down,” the governor told The Associated Press.

Families search for missing people online

Some turned Thursday to a crowdsourced online effort as a combination of power outages and cell phone signal loss has left them out of contact. The spreadsheet created by Maui resident Ellie Erickson and shared widely on social media showed people from around the globe trying to reach people they know on the island. 

Many of the names on the list had been accounted for, scattered at emergency shelters, the airport or turning up with family members. But hundreds of people were still marked “not located” and more names were being added. 

Erickson created the spreadsheet Wednesday morning after seeing Facebook posts get flooded with comments by people looking for their loved ones. 

“I noticed a need for people because the Facebook comments were just getting overwhelming with people posting the same people or someone being found and nobody being able to find that information,” Erickson told USA Today. 

Many areas in Maui still don’t have power or cell service and many phones are dead, Erickson said, making it “nearly impossible for people to get in contact even if they are safe.”

“It’s been super hard seeing the names of people that I know and care about that haven’t been found yet,” Erickson said. “However, being normally the person who gets notified when people are found is so special– that feeling when somebody is safe– it makes it really all worth it.” 

Erickson said he hopes the spreadsheet will help streamline the process of people finding out their loved ones are safe and accounted for, rather than having to go through thousands of posts and comments on Facebook. 

“I really hope that it can be kind of a place where if people are wondering about their friends, their loved ones, if they know somebody is safe they can come onto here and hopefully just give people peace of mind,” Erickson said.

Gusting winds, low humidity, lack of rainfall and dry vegetation lead to destructive fires in Hawaii.

‘A real big relief’: families reconnect with loved ones

Alexis Plume, a resident of Haiku– about 34 miles from Lahaina– was finally able to call her brother’s best friend, whose family lives in Lahaina, Thursday morning after not hearing from them since the fires first started because cell service had been down in the area.