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Search at Florida condo collapse site pauses amid concern about the structure that's still standing - CNN

Search and rescue teams have resumed their work in the rubble of the sections of the Champlain Towers South that collapsed a week ago, Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett said Thursday evening.
Work was halted earlier in the day because of concerns about the structure that is still standing, according to Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava.
A total of 145 people are unaccounted for, officials have said.
[Previous story, published at 5:30 p.m. ET]
Search and rescue work at the site of the collapsed condo building in Surfside, Florida, has been temporarily halted because of structural concerns about the standing structure, the Miami-Dade County mayor said.
"We are doing everything we can and will resume search and rescue as soon as we can," Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said Thursday morning. Families of the victims have been informed about the development, she said at a news briefing.
President Joe Biden's visit to Surfside had no impact on the search and rescue operations, Levine Cava said.
"The only reason for this pause is concerns about the standing structure," she said.
Miami-Dade Fire Chief Alan Cominsky said he had "no time frame" for when the search will resume.
"Definitely we want to continue to focus on search and rescue, so we'll have a meeting with the structural engineers and develop different plans, so we can evaluate and see what's best," the chief said at the news conference.
Several structural engineers on site had concerns about the building's stability, Cominsky said.
"Concern assessments included six to 12 inches of movement, and a large column hanging from the structure that could fall and cause damage to the support columns in the subterranean garage area," he said.
Movement in concrete slabs "could cause additional failure of the building," Cominsky said.
In the early hours after the collapse, search and rescue personnel could hear the voice of a female trapped in the rubble, Cominsky said. She was heard for hours, he said, but they couldn't find her.
That emphasizes "the magnitude of what we're going through," the chief said.
Wednesday brought another harrowing reminder of the tragedy's heartbreaking reckoning when the names of two more children were added to the list of victims.
Lucia Guara, 10, and Emma Guara, 4, were identified Wednesday as two of the 18 people confirmed to have been killed in last week's collapse, Levine Cava said earlier. There are still 145 people unaccounted for.
"Any loss of life -- especially given the unexpected, unprecedented nature of this event -- is a tragedy, but the loss of our children is too great to bear," she said.

Exhausting work sends rescuer to the hospital

One of the girls was a student of Miami-Dade County Public Schools, the school district's superintendent Alberto Carvalho said. In total, 17 of Carvalho's students lived in the building; he has made contact with 15, and one remains unaccounted for, he said.
Now, he says he prays their district won't have to mourn another student. "The weight in my heart is unbearable," Carvalho told CNN.
Biden and first lady Jill Biden traveled to Surfside and met with the search and rescue personnel, first responders and the families of the victims and those still unaccounted for.
"Unfortunately, I've done a lot of these circumstances where I've met with families who've had great loss," the President said after the three-hour meeting. "And what amazed me with this group of people was the resilience, the absolute commitment, their willingness to do whatever it took."
He added: "I walked away impressed by their strength."
Hoping to bring answers to the families of the missing, rescue teams have been working endlessly to break through 13 to 16 feet of the concrete that came crashing down as many residents slept.
Almost 1,400 tons of building material has been removed from the site, Gov. Ron DeSantis said Thursday.
Those at the Champlain Towers South site have been exerting so much effort that one member of a fire rescue team had to go to the hospital for treatment for exhaustion, Florida State Fire Marshal Jimmy Patronis told CNN.
The search, in the dangerous and unstable rubble, is challenging, Cominsky told reporters Wednesday, but officials are bringing in more resources to ensure that the work gets done and responders can get rest.
Seventy members of Pennsylvania-Task Force 1 were leaving to assist with search and rescue efforts, Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf said in a tweet Wednesday. The team will be joined by task forces from New Jersey, Ohio and Indiana.
A new obstacle looms as Tropical Storm Elsa is forming in the Atlantic, with Surfside in its extended forecast cone. The storm will move through the Caribbean before turning toward Florida, DeSantis said.
"We are not expecting any impacts through Saturday," DeSantis said at the news briefing.

Stories emerge of precious moments to escape

The collapse happened in the early morning hours of June 24, and while some families have told miraculous stories of the mere seconds they had to process what was happening and escape, others spoke of the terror.
Ashley Dean's sister, Cassie Stratton, is among the missing. Stratton called her husband to say the pool was collapsing and the ground was shaking, Dean told CNN.
Stratton began to scream loudly, and then the phone went dead, Dean said.
"It was very hard to know that that was my sister's last words and just the terrifying moments that she endured in those last moments before, you know, before and while it was collapsing," Dean said.
Iliana Monteagudo was woken from her sleep that day around 1 a.m. ET by what she described as "a rare force," she told CNN. She thought she had left the balcony door open, so she ran to close it. But then she saw the ceiling where a crack had begun to form, and from there things started coming down fast, she said.
"Something inside of me said run," she said. "You have to run and save your life."
Adriana Sarmiento and Roberto Castillero were staying at a hotel near the Champlain Towers South and just happened to record a video that shows debris and gushing water in the garage of the building minutes before it collapsed.
The couple watched as people in the building rushed to their balconies, confused about the sound. Sarmiento and Castillero scrambled into the street, trying to wave for residents to evacuate, but they couldn't understand her, she said.
Video they recorded after the collapse showed rubble and debris even as far as where they were standing after running back toward their hotel.
They were in disbelief.
"I said, 'Where are the people on the balcony?'" Castillero said. "I did not realize that the balcony was not there."

Residents offered full policy from insurance

Meanwhile, officials, investigators and community members have been asking about the building's structural integrity and if more could have been done to prevent the horror.
A class-action lawsuit filed Monday became the third suit filed against the Champlain Towers South Condominium Association. It states the condominium association had the duty to maintain the building in a safe condition and good working order.
In response to a suit last week, a lawyer for an insurance company for the condo association said Tuesday that the company would make its entire million-dollar policy available to claimants.
In a letter filed before a Florida judge overseeing the suit, lawyer Sina Bahadoran wrote that James River Insurance Company, the commercial general liability insurer for the association, "has made the decision to voluntarily tender its entire limit from the enclosed policy towards attempting to resolve all the claims in this matter."
A National Construction Safety Team has been established to investigate the collapse, James Olthoff, the National Institute of Standards and Technology director, said Wednesday at a news conference.
"Based on the information that we have collected, we are able to recommend a full technical investigation under the National Construction Safety Team Act. We will now establish a team to begin the painstaking process of collecting and analyzing any and all information that might help us determine the technical cause of failure," said Judith Mitrani-Reiser, who is leading the NIST team on site.
The inquiry will be a fact-finding -- not fault-finding -- technical investigation and will not interfere with any ongoing search and rescue operations, Olthoff said.
Some reports suggest damage to the building was made clear to the board before the collapse.
An April 2021 letter from the condo's board president to residents said some damage observed in a 2018 engineer's report, including in the garage, "has gotten significantly worse."
"The concrete deterioration is accelerating. The roof situation got much worse, so extensive roof repairs had to be incorporated," the letter from board President Jean Wodnicki reads.
The 2018 report didn't say whether the structure was at risk of collapse. Donna DiMaggio Berger, an attorney for the condominium board, told CNN on Monday that she didn't think the building was in a state of disrepair prior to its collapse.
"We have months and years to dig into what happened, and we're going to. The board is already in the process of hiring an engineer to also try to figure out what happened, and they will be evaluating who's responsible."
CNN has reached out to representatives of the condominium association for further comment.

Condo association board member resignations

Five members of the condo association's seven-member board -- including its president, Anette Goldstein -- decided to resign in the fall of 2019, when the condo association was debating multimillion-dollar repairs, the Washington Post reported, citing board meeting minutes and Goldstein's resignation letter.
The majority of the Champlain Towers board decided to quit following disputes over the lackluster response in tackling the repairs needed in the condominium complex, the paper reported.
"We work for months to go in one direction and at the very last minute objections are raised that should have been discussed and resolved right in the beginning," Goldstein wrote in her September 2019 resignation letter that was obtained by the Post.
The resignations took place about 11 months after the structural field survey report, which detailed "extensive and necessary repairs," according to the firm that performed the survey, Morabito Consultants.
Goldstein's letter appears to indicate growing frustration in trying to resolve the issue and pay for the repairs, which were estimated to be about $9 million in 2018.
Goldstein and some of the others would later return to the board -- one of the members just three weeks after stepping down -- documents indicate, the Post reported.
The paper said its efforts to reach almost everyone who had served on the board since 2018 were unsuccessful. Two of them are reported to be missing, according to the Post.
The estimated cost for repairs had grown to about $15 million by the time the work was approved by the board in 2021, according to an assessment letter obtained by CNN. Those costs would be paid by the residents.

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