Daily Camera (Boulder)

Mayor expresses regrets after partial collapse of building

- By Scott Mcfetridge, Hannah Fingerhut and Ryan J. Foley The Associated Press

A structural engineer’s report issued last week indicated a wall of a centuryold apartment building in Iowa was at imminent risk of crumbling, yet neither the owner nor city officials warned residents of the danger days before the building partially collapsed, leaving three people missing and feared dead.

The revelation is the latest flashpoint after Sunday’s partial collapse of the building in Davenport, where residents have lashed out at city leaders over what they see as an inept response.

“Do I have regrets about this tragedy and about people potentiall­y losing their lives? Hell yeah. Do I think about this every moment? Hell yeah.” Mayor Mike Matson said Thursday. “I have regrets about a lot of things. Believe me, we’re going to look at that.”

City officials said Thursday that they did not order an evacuation because they relied on the engineer’s assurances that the building remained safe.

The state’s search and rescue team, search dogs and cameras were used Thursday to continue combing the building for missing people. Matson said crews were also consulting with experts about how to safely bring down the structure, which remains extremely unstable, while being respectful of bodies that could be buried in the debris.

The six-story building collapsed shortly before 5 p.m. Sunday. Rescue crews pulled seven people from the building in their initial response and escorted out 12 others who could walk on their own. Later, two more people were rescued, including a woman who was removed from the fourth floor hours after authoritie­s said they were going to begin setting up for demolition.

Earlier this week, authoritie­s said five people were missing, but Davenport Police Chief Jeff Bladel said during a media briefing Thursday that two of them have since been accounted for and are safe.

City officials named those unaccounte­d for as Brandon Colvin, Ryan Hitchcock and Daniel Prien. The city said all three “have high probabilit­y of being home at the time of the collapse and their apartments were located in the collapse zone.”

Bladel said transient people also often enter the building but there is no indication anyone else was inside and missing.

People living in the building will be eligible for $6,000 payments from the city and those meeting certain income requiremen­ts could get state payments of $5,000. Businesses near the collapsed building will also be eligible to receive payments.

City Administra­tor Corri Spiegel said the building likely is “filled with asbestos” given its age and the city will develop a plan to protect workers and others when the structure is demolished.

The city on Wednesday night released documents, including structural engineerin­g reports, that show city officials and the building’s owner were warned that parts of the building were unstable.

A report dated May 24, just four days before the collapse, suggested patches in the west side of the building’s brick façade “appear ready to fall imminently” and could be a safety hazard.

The report also detailed that window openings, some filled and some unfilled, were insecure. In one case, the openings were “bulging outward” and looked “poised to fall.” Inside the first floor, unsupporte­d window openings help “explain why the façade is currently about to topple outward.”

Despite the warnings, city officials did not order some 50 tenants to leave the building.

Rich Oswald, the city’s director of developmen­t and neighborho­od services, confirmed Thursday that the city’s chief building official, Trishna Pradhan, resigned earlier this week in the aftermath of the collapse.

Pradhan had visited the building on May 25, and erroneousl­y reported it had “passed” an inspection in notes in the city’s online permitting system, Oswald said.

Pradhan attempted to change the inspection result to “incomplete” on Tuesday — after the collapse — but a technical glitch instead listed the outcome as “failed,” he said. Oswald said the “incomplete” status is the correct status since the repair work was unfinished.

Though the error was administra­tive, Oswald said the “magnitude of the situation and the error that was made” led to Pradhan’s resignatio­n.

Calls and text messages to Pradhan were not immediatel­y returned.

The city clarified later in the day that Pradhan had resigned voluntaril­y and not in lieu of terminatio­n. Under Iowa law, it is a confidenti­al personnel matter and the city is not required to explain the departure.

Matson promised to improve inspection­s and to investigat­e what happened.

Andrew Wold, the building’s owner, released a statement dated Tuesday saying “our thoughts and prayers are with our tenants.” County records show his company, Davenport Hotel, L.L.C., acquired the building in a 2021 deal worth $4.2 million.

As the building deteriorat­ed, tenants repeatedly complained about a host of other problems they say were ignored by property managers, including no heat or hot water for weeks or months at a time, mold and water leakage from ceilings and toilets. City officials gave orders to vacate some individual apartments and tried to address other complaints, but a broader building evacuation was never ordered, records show.

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