CINCINNATI — Crews are still out Saturday morning looking for two missing workers at the now-closed Killen Generating Station in Adams County, which had a partial collapse early Wednesday morning.

The plant is slated to be demolished, which is why workers were there, planning out how to execute it. 

Adamo Group, the demolition company in charge of taking down the Killen Generating Station, released this statement Friday:

“Adamo Group is cooperating fully with authorities and we will continue to investigate the cause of this accident. We are working with local officials and we will assist in any possible way to aid in the search and recovery of the missing workers. The safety and well-being of our employees has been, and will continue to be, our primary concern and focus. That said, we cannot discuss the status of any employee out of respect for the privacy and confidentiality of personal employee information.”

Three workers were rescued, and a few of them were hospitalized for the injuries. The extend of the injuries are unknown.

On Thursday, the department turned the search mission into a recovery mission for the two missing workers, but families are still holding out hope. 

One of the missing workers was identified as Jamie Fitzgerald. His fiance, Lora Conley, says she's keeping her head up and putting faith in the search crews.

“Where possibly he could be is a spot that maybe dogs couldn’t get to. Some of the beams are very long and they can’t just get them off they have to lift them off. They think Jamie was on a man lift or near a man lift. They found the man lift but they didn’t find him," Conley said.

The site is currently covered in mangled metal and debris, and families of the missing workers say it's likely they'll need heavy machinery to lift up parts of the collapse. 

The sheriff's office says there's been no changes in the search overnight. 

The Killen Generating Station began operations in 1982 closed in March 2017 along with the J.M. Stuart Station due to financial and environmental challenges. AES Ohio Generation operated the plant, which is a subsidiary of the AES Corporation.

There's been two recorded incidents in its nearly five-decade history. In 1984, a worker died after getting stuck in a coal chute and another worker died in 1994 from hypothermia on site.