Florida condo death toll rises to 79 after another body is found
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[July 10, 2021]
(Reuters) -The death toll in the
collapse of an Miami-area condominium tower rose to 79 on Friday after
workers extracted 14 more bodies from the ruins and said they had
reduced the pile of debris down nearly to ground level.
The recovery left 61 people still missing and feared dead in the
concrete and steel rubble of the 12-story oceanfront building in
Surfside, Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava told an afternoon
news conference.
The number of missing could change as it remains possible that not all
were in the building when it abruptly crumbled to the ground in the
early morning hours of June 24. Officials have yet to determine the
cause of the disaster.
Crews working around the clock for 16 days have cut the size of the
debris pile from four or five stories to nearly ground level, with some
at below-ground level.
The pace at which crews were finding the dead has accelerated since
teams demolished a still-standing section of the building over the
weekend, allowing greater access inside the ruins and more use of heavy
equipment.
Levine Cava said a cat named Binx that had been living on the ninth
floor of the building before it caved in had been found alive in the
area, calling the discovery after more than two weeks "a small bit of
good news."
A debate has already sprung up among members of the stricken community
over what to do with the site where the Champlain Towers South once
stood, with attorneys for some of the victims' family members suggesting
it should be a memorial to the dead.
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A rescue worker is seen as search-and-rescue efforts resume the day
after the managed demolition of the remaining part of Champlain
Towers South complex in Surfside, Florida, U.S. July 5, 2021.
REUTERS/Marco Bello
Investigators have not determined what caused the
Champlain Towers South to fall apart without warning. Attention has
been focused on a 2018 engineering report that warned of structural
deficiencies.
Following the collapse residents of a nearby condominium, Crestview
Towers, were told to leave after engineers found serious concrete
and electrical problems. They have not been allowed to return as
city officials try to determine if the building can be stabilized.
(Reporting by Peter Szekely in New York, and Nathan Layne in Wilton,
Connecticut and Dan Whitcomb in Los AngelesWriting by Dan
WhitcombEditing by Aurora Ellis and Matthew Lewis)
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