Biden headed to Florida to grieve with families of condo collapse
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[July 01, 2021]
By Jarrett Renshaw
(Reuters) -President Joe Biden and his
wife, Jill Biden, planned to travel on Thursday to Surfside, Florida,
site of the deadly condominium collapse, to offer condolences to
families of those killed and missing as the casualty toll climbed.
Biden, whose personal experience with tragedy has been a hallmark of his
political career, will reprise the role of "consoler-in-chief" while
rescue teams search for victims in the rubble of the high-rise, which
caved in a week ago as residents slept.
The confirmed death toll rose to 18 on Wednesday with the discovery of
six more bodies in the ruins of the Champlain Towers South condo,
including the remains of two children, ages 4 and 10, Miami-Dade County
Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said. Another 145 people are missing and
feared trapped in the rubble.
Nobody has been pulled alive from the mounds of pulverized concrete,
splintered lumber and twisted metal since the early hours of the
disaster in the oceanfront town of Surfside, adjacent to Miami Beach.
Authorities have held out hope that more survivors might be found, but
prospects have grown dimmer by the hour.
Thursday's trip marks the second time since Biden became president that
he has paid a visit to the scene of a disaster.
In February, he traveled to Texas after a powerful winter storm left
millions without power or clean water for days and killed several
people.
Biden delayed his visit to Florida to avoid interrupting rescue efforts.
He has issued an emergency declaration and provided state and local
officials with federal assistance to help respond to the collapse.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
have deployed teams to assist with search-and-rescue, incident
management and debris removal. FEMA also has coordinated with state and
local officials to open a family assistance center and provide
communications support.
Biden, a Democrat, will likely appear beside Florida’s Republican
Governor Ron DeSantis, seen as a potential top-tier candidate to
challenge Biden's reelection in three years. DeSantis has risen to power
in Florida politics and built a brand as a sharp-elbowed partisan
warrior, often challenging Biden on issues such as the COVID-19 pandemic
and immigration.
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Emergency workers conduct search and rescue efforts at the site of a
partially collapsed residential building in Surfside, near Miami
Beach, Florida, U.S. June 30, 2021. REUTERS/Joe Skipper
Biden planned to use the visit to express thanks to
the "heroic first responders, search-and-rescue teams, and everyone
who has been working tirelessly around the clock," White House press
secretary Jen Psaki said.
The president and first lady also will "meet with families who have
been forced to endure this terrible tragedy," Psaki added.
Biden's gift for connecting his own hardships with the grief and
anguish of others has become a defining feature of his persona,
having endured the deaths of his first wife, a daughter and a son
during his years in public life.
The governor and the president spoke by telephone last week, and
afterwards DeSantis praised Biden for his support.
Investigators have not concluded what caused nearly half of the
40-year-old condo complex to crumble in one of the deadliest
building collapses in U.S. history.
But a 2018 report prepared by the engineering firm Morabito
Consultants ahead of a building safety recertification process found
structural deficiencies in the 12-floor, 136-unit complex that are
now the focus of inquiries.
The Washington Post reported late on Wednesday that the majority of
the board of the Surfside condominium, including its president,
resigned in 2019, partly in frustration over what was seen as the
sluggish response to the report that identified major structural
damage the previous year.
(Reporting By Jarrett Renshaw; Additional reporting by Gabriella
Borter, Steve Gorman, Dan Whitcomb, Rich McKay, Brendan O'Brien,
Peter Szekely, Brad Heath, Alexandra Ulmer, Jonathan Allen and
Kanishka Singh. Editing by Gerry Doyle and Giles Elgood)
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