The families of 43 killed in the Oso landslide have been working to get a permanent memorial for the site, and this week they took a big step toward that effort.
A permanent memorial is meant to be a place where visitors from around the world and local students can come to learn about what happened there, similar to memorials placed at other disaster sites.
Meet Tim and Willy Harper, two volunteer Oso firefighters who refused to leave their hometown fire station that devastating day in 2014 and who helped ensure all 43 victims were found.
A heroic brother was determined to find everyone lost in the tragic Oso landslide in 2014, including his sister. His mom gave him a mission: Go find your sister Summer.
Tim Ward heard a rumbling but thought it was just the Navy jets that often trained in the area over the weekends. When the ground beneath him started to move and they lost power he realized it was something else.
Help fund the Oso Mudslide Memorial by participating in “Dollar Up for Oso,” exclusively at the Evergreen State Fair in Monroe. Add a dollar when you purchase your Evergreen State Fair tickets at the gate or online at Etix.com. 100% of your donated dollars will go toward the official Memorial fund. Experience the fun of […]
An Oso memorial is taking shape where the massive, tragic landslide took the lives of 43 people and wiped a community off the map. This is how you can help.
Join KIRO Radio in helping Snohomish County raise over $6 million needed to help build a memorial for Oso on the fifth anniversary of the nation's deadliest mudslide.