The Daily Courier

Families want answers despite settlement

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Gathered at a ceremony Thursday to honor the 98 people who died in a Florida condominiu­m collapse last summer, some of the victims’ family members said they are too deep in mourning to contemplat­e the nearly $1 billion settlement their attorneys negotiated on their behalf.

Families and local officials gathered at the chain-link fence surroundin­g the vacant lot where Champlain Towers South once stood for the unveiling of temporary banners adorned with the victims’ names and ages under the heading “Fathers, Mothers, Sons, Daughters, Brothers, Sisters.”

The ceremony took place a day after the surprise announceme­nt that a $997 million settlement had been reached in the families’ lawsuit against local officials, the developers of an adjacent building and others whom they hold responsibl­e for the collapse of the 40-year-old, 12-story beachside building during the early hours of June 24.

For Ronit Felszer Naibryf, whose 21-yearold son Ilan Naibryf was killed in the collapse, it feels like she lost a limb, so it is impossible to fathom the settlement.

“I am still processing that loss,” she said. “Everything else is a little bit of noise.”

Pablo Rodriguez, who lost his mother and grandmothe­r in the collapse, said the settlement was the best result the families could hope for legally.

“The speed with which this was resolved was pleasantly surprising,” he said. “My biggest concern is that there isn’t any accountabi­lity and the legislatur­e hasn’t done anything to remediate the situation.”

Most of the Champlain Towers South collapsed suddenly about 1:20 a.m. June 24 as most of its residents slept. Only three people survived the initial collapse. No other survivors were found despite the aroundthe-clock efforts of rescuers who dug through a 40-foot pile of rubble for two weeks.

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