Toronto Star

Families mourn workers lost in crash

Crew all migrants from Mexico or Central America

- CLAUDIO ESCALÓN

AZACUALPA, HONDURAS The constructi­on workers who went missing in the Baltimore bridge collapse came to the Maryland area from Mexico or Central America, including an enterprisi­ng Honduran father and husband who started a delivery business before the pandemic forced him to find other work, according to his family.

Police managed to close bridge traffic seconds before a cargo ship slammed into one of the Francis Scott Key Bridge’s supports early Tuesday, causing the span to fall into the frigid Patapsco River. There wasn’t time for a maintenanc­e crew filling potholes on the span to get to safety.

At least eight people fell into the water and two were rescued. Two bodies were recovered Wednesday and four remained missing and were presumed dead.

The government­s of Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras confirmed that their citizens were among the missing.

Maynor Yassir Suazo Sandoval, 38, was the youngest of eight siblings from Azacualpa, a rural mountainou­s area in northweste­rn Honduras along the border with Guatemala.

Eighteen years ago, he set out on his own for the U.S. looking for opportunit­ies. He had worked as an industrial technician in Honduras, repairing equipment in the large assembly plants, but the pay was too low to get ahead, one of his brothers, Martín Suazo Sandoval, said Wednesday while standing in the dirt street in front of the family’s small hotel in Honduras.

“He always dreamed of having his own business,” he said.

Another brother, Carlos Suazo Sandoval, said Maynor hoped to retire one day back in Guatemala.

“He was the baby for all of us, the youngest. He was someone who was always happy, was always thinking about the future. He was a visionary,” he told The Associated Press by phone Wednesday from Dundalk, Md., near the site of the bridge collapse.

Maynor entered the United States illegally and settled in Maryland. At first, he did any work he could find, including constructi­on and clearing brush. Eventually, he started a package delivery business in the Baltimore-Washington area, Martín Suazo Sandoval said.

Other siblings and relatives followed him north.

“He was the fundamenta­l pillar, the bastion so that other members of the family could also travel there and later get visas and everything,” Martín Suazo Sandoval said.

“He was really the driving force so that most of the family could travel.”

Maynor has a wife and two children ages 17 and 5, he said.

The COVID-19 pandemic forced Maynor to find other work, and he joined Brawner Builders, the company that was performing maintenanc­e on the bridge when it collapsed.

Martín Suazo Sandoval said Maynor never talked about being scared of the work, despite the heights he worked at on the bridges. “He always told us that you had to triple your effort to get ahead,” Martín Suazo Sandoval said. “He said it didn’t matter what time or where the job was, you had to be where the work was.”

Things had been going well for him until the collapse. He was moving through the steps to get legal residency and planned to return to Honduras this year to complete the process, his brother said.

Even though Maynor had not been able to return to Honduras, he had financiall­y supported various non-government­al social organizati­ons in town, as well as the youth soccer league, his brother said. The area depends largely upon agricultur­e — coffee, cattle, sugarcane — he said.

Maynor’s employer broke the news of his disappeara­nce to his family, leaving them devastated, especially his mother, who still lives in Azacualpa, Martín Suazo Sandoval said.

“These are difficult moments, and the only thing we can do is keep the faith,” he said, noting that his younger brother knew how to swim and could have ended up anywhere. If the worst outcome is confirmed, he said the family would work to return his body to Honduras.

In Mexico, President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said three Mexicans were on the bridge when it fell, including one who was injured but rescued and two who were still missing. He wouldn’t share their names for the families’ privacy.

The tragedy illustrate­d the contributi­ons that migrants make to the U.S. economy, López Obrador said.

“This demonstrat­es that migrants go out and do risky jobs at midnight. And for this reason, they do not deserve to be treated as they are by certain insensitiv­e, irresponsi­ble politician­s in the United States,” he said.

Later, Col. Roland L. Butler Jr., superinten­dent of Maryland State Police, announced that the bodies of two men, ages 35 and 26, had been located by divers inside a red pickup submerged in about 7.6 metres of water near the bridge’s middle span.

 ?? PETER KNUDSON NTSB VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A National Transporta­tion and Safety Board investigat­or looks over the damage to the Francis Scott Key Bridge on Thursday in Baltimore from the cargo vessel Dali, which struck and collapsed the bridge on Tuesday.
PETER KNUDSON NTSB VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A National Transporta­tion and Safety Board investigat­or looks over the damage to the Francis Scott Key Bridge on Thursday in Baltimore from the cargo vessel Dali, which struck and collapsed the bridge on Tuesday.
 ?? ?? Missing worker Maynor Yassir Suazo Sandoval has a wife and two children, ages 5 and 17.
Missing worker Maynor Yassir Suazo Sandoval has a wife and two children, ages 5 and 17.

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