 Following the collapse of a former coal washing facility in Martin County, the search continues for one of the workers who was inside at the time of its collapse. Crews have continued to search throughout the night going under the rubble. We were not able to locate the second worker at this point. After much discussion and meetings and analysis on the ground, they've decided to change to a different phase of the rescue to where we actually move into removing layers of the rubble to try to see if we can find the missing worker. We haven't given up hope. It remains a rescue operation of still this morning at this time, and we pray that those efforts will be successful. You want to save money and Appalachian Wireless gets that. Right now, you can get up to $650 off select devices, including the latest and the greatest on the advantage and limited plan with a trade-in. Did y'all hear me? Up to $650 off select devices, including the latest and greatest with a trade-in. I'm not a math whiz, but this deal, it's amazing. And you'll be on the region's premier network. We are you. We are Appalachian Wireless. After exhausting all measures in the primary search, including searching all accessible voids and sites dogs indicated, the decision was made to bring in heavy equipment. We knew that we were going to have to go into this next phase with a lot of heavy equipment, so we began ordering that yesterday. A lot of it came on site yesterday evening. We're going to continue to get some of that heavy equipment from even outside of the state of Kentucky that's already in a process of getting here. We're going to attack it from several different areas. We're assigning our search groups to these. One, we pick things off the pile. That's our primary search that we did yesterday. We're actually going to put the debris in a pile, assign a rescue group to it, do a secondary search on that to make sure that it doesn't have any clue of the last known location of the victim that we're actually looking for. So it's a very methodical process. It's a very slow process, but it's a process that has to take place in order to get down into the building, again, where that last known location was. Stay tuned to Mountain Top News for updates as the search continues. Reporting for Mountain Top News, I'm Brianna Robinson.