Miami condo death toll reaches 95 as crews near end of search

As exhausted crews neared the end of their search for victims of the condominium tower collapse in Surfside, Florida, the death toll reached 95. A handful of people were still unaccounted for.

The mayor of Miami-Dade, Daniella Levine Cava, said the number of missing has dwindled as authorities work to identify everyone connected to the building. She said 14 people remain unaccounted for, which includes 10 bodies recovered but not yet identified – leaving potentially four more victims to be found.

“It’s a scientific, methodical process to identify human remains. As we’ve said, this work is becoming more difficult with the passage of time,” Levine Cava said, adding that it is “truly a fluid situation”.

Of the 14 considered not accounted for, the mayor said 12 are the subject of missing persons reports and detectives are trying to verify information about the other two.

Twenty days after the disaster, Levine Cava said crews had removed 18,000,000lb of rubble. Search crews were taking great care to identify and preserve any personal property, she added.

“They have given of their heart and soul,” Levine Cava said of crews that have worked around the clock for nearly three weeks. “We are totally walking among superheroes.”

It will take much longer for experts to figure out what caused the 12-story Champlain Towers South to fall on 24 June. The building was set for its four-decade recertification review.

Engineers and others investigating the collapse have been identifying key pieces of the 40-year-old building to determine what happened, Surfside’s mayor, Charles Burkett, said.

“We’re looking at how the building lines up with what the plans say,” he said.

The search for answers includes an engineer hired by the town of Surfside, a team from the National Institute of Standards and Technology, experts hired by lawyers representing families and others.

Part of the investigation will include what decisions were made by government officials and the condominium board, which knew of serious structural problems as early as fall 2018. Some residents were reluctant to pay assessments in the tens of thousands of dollars for the repairs, leading to acrimonious meetings.

There is concern about the stability of Champlain Towers North, a nearly identical building built at the same time and by the same developer. So far, no mandatory evacuation order has been given.

“If there were a need to make any changes, they would,” Levine Cava said of the north tower.

Discussions continue about what to do with the collapse site with families of the victims, Burkett said. Some residents who escaped the disaster want the tower rebuilt so they can move back in. Others want some kind of memorial site.

“We want the families to tell us what they want to see,” Burkett said. “I’m looking forward to having those discussions.”

source: theguardian.com