The Pak Banker

Miami condo collapse’ death toll climbs to 16

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MIAMI: The death toll in the collapse of a beachfront condo in Surfside, Fla., increased to 16 Wednesday as hope of finding survivors continues to fade. At a press conference near the site of the collapse, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said four bodies were pulled from the rubble overnight, raising the official death toll to 16 while lowering the number of missing to 147. Cava said that officials are conducting an audit of the list of people who are unaccounte­d for, and that the figures remain "fluid."

Search and rescue efforts will continue, as officials said they are not yet ready to pivot to the search and recovery phase. "It's absolutely still a search and rescue mission," Alan Cominsky, Miami-Dade fire chief, told reporters. "We're not leaving anybody behind," Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett said. "This is going to go until we pull everybody out of there."

No survivors have been pulled from the rubble since Thursday, when 37 people were taken out alive in the hours after the building collapsed. One of them later died at the hospital.

Fifteen bodies have been recovered since. President Biden, who authorized the Federal Emergency Management Agency to aid in the rescue and recovery efforts, plans to visit Surfside .

Last week he offered sympathy for the families waiting for news about loved ones. "There's nothing worse than having to wait and wonder," Biden said. More than 200 emergency personnel, including the Army Corps of Engineers and teams from Israel and Mexico, have been working around the clock on the pile of twisted metal and concrete. Rescue crews have been using light equipment, including shovels and buckets, as well as specially trained dogs and sonar equipment, to search the pile.

Heavy rain and intermitte­nt thundersto­rms have complicate­d rescue operations. It's the largest deployment of task force resources in the state of Florida that has not been for a hurricane, Gov. Ron DeSantis said. The last rescue effort of this size was undertaken in 2018, after Hurricane Michael, a Category 5 storm, struck.

Kevin Guthrie, director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management, said a tropical storm system has prompted officials to ask the federal government for the additional team so the state's resources could be deployed to respond to the severe weather. "We are doing everything humanly possible and then some to get through this," Cava said.

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