Friday 2 July 2021

Florida building collapse: Death toll rises to 20 as hurricane complicates search

SURFSIDE, Fla. (NewsNation Now) — Florida Governor Ron DeSantis warned Friday that search and rescue efforts in the Surfside building collapse may be hampered by an incoming hurricane expected to hit this weekend.

Florida officials were working on plans to tear down what’s left of a partially collapsed oceanfront condominium building after concerns about the structure’s instability prompted a 15-hour halt to the search for survivors.

The collapse of the 12-story Champlain Towers South condominium killed at least 20 people. At least 128 are still missing and feared buried beneath tons of pulverized concrete, twisted metal and splintered lumber as the search stretched into its ninth day. No one has been rescued since the first hours after the collapse.

Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava confirmed that emergency workers found two more bodies Thursday night. She said the 7-year-old child's father was a Miami firefighter.

Cava stated the demolition decision needs to be made “extremely carefully and methodically,” considering the potential impact on the pile of debris and the effect on the search.

Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett said the city is also working on relocating residents in the sister tower, Champlain Towers North, due to safety concerns.

The Champlain Towers South Condominium Association board issued a statement Thursday morning announcing that an independent receiver has been appointed to oversee the legal and claims process.

"The collapse of Champlain Towers South is an unspeakable tragedy that has devastated our community, our neighbors, and our friends," the statement read in part. "We are grieving and our hearts ache for those who have been lost and for their families. They have our deepest condolences."

The association added they will work with all investigations launched into the collapse as well as any search and rescue efforts.

Scott Nacheman, a FEMA structures specialist, said engineers are looking at different methods for the demolition and how to proceed “to make the site safe for ongoing rescue operations.”

Nacheman said that if the building comes down, there initially will be a slowdown in the rescue operation. But he said the demolition of the structure would create a safer working environment that could allow more personnel on the site and accelerate the pace of the work.

He said it would likely be weeks before officials schedule the demolition.

The rescue work was halted early Thursday after crews noticed widening cracks and up to a foot of movement in a large column.

The halt threatened to dim hopes for finding anyone alive in the debris a week after the tower came down. Burkett said the halt was worrisome since “minutes and hours matter, lives are at stake.”

The operation was restarted about 15 hours later when it was deemed safe, though with a new set of precautionary measures in place, Miami-Dade County Fire and Rescue Chief Alan Cominsky told reporters Thursday evening.

Under the new search plan, teams would confine their work for now to just three of nine grids demarcated in the ruins of the building, Cominsky said.

Authorities were eager to make as much progress as possible before the expected arrival of Tropical Storm Elsa, which was blowing in from the Atlantic.

The cause of the collapse is under investigation. A 2018 engineering report found that the building's ground-floor pool deck was resting on a concrete slab that had “major structural damage” and needed extensive repairs. The report also found “abundant cracking” of concrete columns, beams and walls in the parking garage.

Just two months before the building came down, the president of its board wrote a letter to residents saying that structural problems identified in the 2018 inspection had “gotten significantly worse” and that major repairs would cost at least $15.5 million. With bids for the work still pending, the building suddenly collapsed last Thursday.

During a private meeting with family members Thursday, President Joe Biden drew on his own experiences with grief to try to comfort them. Biden lost his first wife and baby daughter in a car crash and decades later lost an adult son to brain cancer.

“I just wish there was something I could do to ease the pain,” he said in a video posted on Instagram by Jacqueline Patoka, a woman who was close to a couple and their daughter who are still missing.

Biden spoke of wanting to switch places with a lost or missing loved one. “The waiting, the waiting is unbearable,” he said.



from KRON4 https://ift.tt/3jD4i0Q


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