Miami Herald

No answers yet at feds’ first public hearing on Champlain Towers collapse investigat­ion

- BY AARON LEIBOWITZ aleibowitz@miamiheral­d.com For a longer version of this story, go to www. miamiheral­d.com. Aaron Leibowitz: 305-376-2235, @aaron_leib

The federal investigat­ion into the cause of the catastroph­ic collapse at Champlain Towers South is “well underway,” officials said Monday during their first formal update on the probe. But four-plus months after the tragedy, there is no official word yet on what might have caused it or a timeline of when that answer could come.

The deliberate pace is not unusual for the National Institute of Standards and Technology, a sub-agency of the Department of Commerce whose mission includes investigat­ing a select few major building failures. But it’s a source of frustratio­n for some family members of the 98 dead.

“The reality is that we were expecting a lot more informatio­n [from] this presentati­on,” David Rodan, whose brother and three cousins died in the June 24 collapse, said during a public comment period Monday. “Four months should be enough to get a little bit more informatio­n.”

He added: “We would prefer the next report to actually have some findings, even if they’re not conclusive or not complete.”

But initial findings likely won’t be coming at the next hearing, which is tentativel­y set for next June. “In previous investigat­ions, we have not shared preliminar­y conclusion­s or findings before our draft report,” said NIST spokeswoma­n Jennifer Huergo.

Past NIST investigat­ions have taken between 2 1/2 and six years.

At Monday’s hearing — a virtual presentati­on for an advisory committee that offers guidance to investigat­ors — NIST officials said its assembled team of experts has already taken substantia­l steps. Members of the team have gathered evidence from the collapse site in Surfside, collected below-ground and foundation materials and sent them to labs for testing, and begun interviewi­ng people who are “knowledgea­ble” of South Florida constructi­on from the time Champlain Towers South went up in 1981.

It’s all part of an effort to ultimately create a computer model to simulate where the collapse began and how it progressed, determine what caused it, and make recommenda­tions on how to prevent similar catastroph­es in the future.

“Our mission is not to find fault, determine responsibi­lity or assess liability, but rather determine why the failure occurred so that we can learn from it and avert future disasters,” said Glenn Bell, associate lead investigat­or for the agency.

NIST officials have previously said that, if they learn anything during their investigat­ion that indicates other buildings — including the two sister towers of Champlain South — are at risk, they would immediatel­y share it with the public. But the agency’s primary focus is determinin­g how Champlain South failed, however long that takes.

Bell said during a discussion of the investigat­ion budget that the work “will probably extend beyond two years.” Federal lawmakers have allocated $22 million to support the probe.

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