Baltimore Sun

Death toll increases to 94 at collapse site in Surfside

- By Bobby Caina Calvan

MIAMI — The death toll in the Miami-area condominiu­m collapse climbed to 94 Monday as officials planned to step up security at the site to make sure the personal possession­s of the victims are preserved for their families.

Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said 22 people remain unaccounte­d for in the June 24 collapse of Champlain Towers South, an oceanside condo building in Surfside. Levine Cava said 83 of the victims have been identified, but “the process of making identifica­tions has been made more difficult as time goes on.”

Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett said officials have decided to increase security around the debris pile to ensure that the site is preserved. Only authorized personnel will be allowed.

“It’s obvious that this has become much more than a collapsed building site,” Burkett said. “It has become a holy site.”

Miami-Dade Police Department Director

Alfredo Ramirez III said there has been “no criminalit­y” at the site, but officials want to make sure the area is secure so crews can continue to preserve personal items found in the rubble.

“As families are being notified about their family members, the ask is always about property. People want some sort of connection to their family member, so it’s very important that our process that we have in place continues to flow uninterrup­ted,” Ramirez said during a morning news conference.

“It’s just part of the process. This is a long, painful, hurtful process,” he said.

Burkett said work crews recently found a business card for an artist and then found several paintings they carefully pulled out of the debris pile to preserve for family members.

Levine Cava also addressed the announceme­nt Sunday that a vaccinated Miami-Dade county commission­er who helped other local officials in Surfside has tested positive for COVID-19. The news release from Miami-Dade

County Commission Chairman Jose “Pepe” Diaz said he and his chief of staff, Isidoro Lopez, who also received a vaccine against COVID-19, came down with flu-like symptoms earlier in the day and later tested positive for the virus.

Levine Cava said officials who were in close proximity to Diaz and Lopez have been tested and all have come back negative. Levine Cava and other officials who spoke at Monday’s news conference did not wear face masks.

Diaz had participat­ed in news conference­s and meetings with other officials in Surfside, the Miami Herald reported.

“Breakthrou­gh” infections — fully vaccinated individual­s who contract the coronaviru­s — do happen, although they are very rare.

An Associated Press analysis of government data in May showed only about 1% of such cases resulted in hospitaliz­ation or death. The analysis suggested that nearly all COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. recently have been in people who weren’t vaccinated.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP ?? A wooden heart is marked with messages of love at a memorial wall near the Champlain Towers South building collapse on Monday in Surfside, Florida.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP A wooden heart is marked with messages of love at a memorial wall near the Champlain Towers South building collapse on Monday in Surfside, Florida.

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