Miami Herald

A federal agency has done 4 disaster investigat­ions in 20 years. Surfside may be No. 5

- BY ALEX DAUGHERTY adaugherty@mcclatchyd­c.com Miami Herald reporter Dana Cassidy and McClatchy DC White House correspond­ent Michael Wilner contribute­d to this report. Alex Daugherty: 202-383-6049, @alextdaugh­erty

A federal agency staffed with some of the world’s preeminent chemists and engineers has conducted only four investigat­ions into building failures in the past 20 years, each time when the loss of life is high or the cause couldn’t immediatel­y be determined.

After it was given the authority to take on investigat­ions following 9/11, the National Institute of Standards and Technology spent years looking into the 2001 World Trade Center collapse, which killed 2,763 people; the 2003 Rhode Island nightclub fire, which killed 100; the 2011 Joplin, Missouri, tornado that killed 158; and it launched an ongoing investigat­ion into Hurricane Maria in 2018, where more than 3,000 people died.

The Champlain Towers South condo collapse — where 11 people were confirmed dead as of Monday evening with 150 unaccounte­d for — is looking ever-more-likely to become the agency’s fifth.

“NIST was given the official responsibi­lity to investigat­e a one-of-a-kind natural disaster where there is new science to be learned,” said former NIST director Dr. Willie May, a chemist and Barack Obama appointee who led the agency from 2014 to 2017. “If there was another event very similar to this, NIST would not get involved, because it needs to be a unique occurrence.”

Not many people can cite an event quite like the collapse of Champlain Towers South.

NIST isn’t an agency that specialize­s in disasters, like the Federal Emergency Management Agency, nor does it conduct investigat­ions of deadly accidents that occur nearly every day around the country, like the National Transporta­tion Safety Board. Instead, NIST is a research-focused body of 3,400 employees, including four Nobel Prizewinni­ng physicists who developed the atomic clock, with a $1 billion annual budget.

The agency is called in only when an investigat­ion is expected to yield major changes to standards or building codes. In the Champlain Towers South case, its work could prevent future tragedies in large buildings around the country.

NIST spokespers­on Jennifer Huergo said the agency must follow establishe­d protocols to officially begin an investigat­ion, but strongly hinted that the agency will act.

“We don’t have a strict timeline,” Huergo said in an interview Monday with the Miami Herald. “We expect [the experts in Surfside] will make a recommenda­tion to the director of NIST. I don’t want people to worry that we’re not going to do something here. We just can’t pre-judge.”

The Surfside team will likely make a recommenda­tion requesting the NIST director invoke the National Constructi­on Safety

Team Act, a law that would allow a formal investigat­ion to begin. There’s also the possibilit­y that NIST, which is part of the Commerce Department, will choose not to investigat­e or conduct a more limited study, which the agency did following the 2018 Camp Fire in California and the 2009 collapse of the Dallas Cowboys’ tent-like practice facility.

Once the recommenda­tion is made, the agency assembles a large team of scientists and other experts to begin years of painstakin­g work. The investigat­ion must also include someone who isn’t under the agency’s authority, Huergo said.

Currently, the federal government has six scientists and engineers on the ground in Surfside — the first step of a potential rare, years-long investigat­ion with input from dozens of experts to determine why the 12-story oceanfront condo tower partially collapsed.

The team of NIST experts — including two structural engineers and a geotechnic­al engineer who specialize­s in soil and rock mechanics — has a mandate to investigat­e major disasters with an eye toward recommendi­ng changes to building codes that could help prevent future tragedies.

Huergo said the scientists currently on the ground in Surfside, who all arrived by Sunday evening, are there “to connect with the right people down there and identify informatio­n they may be able to pull into a full investigat­ion” such as setting aside certain materials for closer inspection.

There are already calls from the White House for a formal federal probe into the collapse, though those calls haven’t specified which agencies should be involved. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said Monday that more than 50 federal personnel are in Surfside, including NIST experts, the U.S.

Army Corps of Engineers and FEMA.

“The goal, of course, is to get to the bottom of what happened, and of course, how to be an instructiv­e guide on how to prevent it from happening in the future,” Psaki said.

Huergo and May said a NIST investigat­ion would not determine if specific entities bear responsibi­lity for the disaster, or any potential civil or criminal penalties. Instead, its inquiry would narrowly focus on using scientific expertise to determine why the structure collapsed, and use the findings to develop new guidelines and standards that allow the constructi­on industry and rule-making bodies like the Miami-Dade County Commission to make changes.

“If you look at the World Trade Center as an example, basically NIST’s responsibi­lity was to determine how and why the towers fell from a structural perspectiv­e,” May said. “I think we all know why they fell, but exactly what caused the fall from a mechanical perspectiv­e, what happened and are there new standards that might be informed by that event.”

May said in the World

Trade Center case, tons of debris were transporte­d to NIST laboratori­es for examinatio­n. In other cases, that may not be necessary.

But May said one thing is certain if NIST begins a formal investigat­ion into the collapse: It will be years until its findings are finalized and made public.

“NIST is very deliberate. It’s not going to be completed in a few months if history is any indicator,” May said.

In the case of the Joplin tornado, the NIST final report from the May 2011 storm was released in March 2014. The recommenda­tions, which involved the work of hundreds of experts, ranged from updated tornadospe­cific building codes to GPS-based mobile phone alerts for bad weather that are now commonplac­e around the country.

And NIST’s work continues after the formal investigat­ion concludes. The agency released an update on Joplin last month, using the storm’s 10-year anniversar­y to follow up on the recommenda­tions.

NIST doesn’t solely exist to conduct investigat­ions. The agency, which was founded in 1901, conducts scientific and technical research along with establishi­ng standards for time, weight and length.

Huergo said the agency has physicists and chemists who study concrete to measure its performanc­e and how it ages over time. When they’re called into an investigat­ion, some of those experts will shift roles for years until the work is complete.

“We’re not sitting around waiting for disasters,” Huergo said. “We have people who are always looking at concrete. We’re constantly looking at how do we better measure the performanc­e of buildings and how do we make them better. So when there is an event like this, we shift research.”

Other federal agencies could launch separate investigat­ions. The Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion, or OSHA, was in Surfside on Friday to determine whether the agency has the authority to investigat­e.

While NIST’s investigat­ions are similar to the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, an agency that investigat­es transporta­tion-related accidents like the 2018 Florida Internatio­nal University pedestrian bridge collapse, the NTSB conducts about 2,500 investigat­ions a year compared to the four conducted by NIST in the past 20 years.

May, who now works for Morgan State University in Baltimore, said NIST’s approach is designed to advance scientific understand­ing of disasters, noting that every investigat­ion yields a list of new recommenda­tions that often lead to new standards and laws around the country. He said he was “grief stricken” when watching video of the collapse, the likes of which he hadn’t seen since joining NIST in 1971.

“I was grief-stricken, like any human being would be who witnessed something like that,” May said. “I didn’t think of the World Trade Center or anything else. When I saw that clip and how devastatin­g it was, I was concerned about the human toll.”

 ?? EMILY MICHOT emichot@miamiheral­d.com ?? Search and rescue crews from Florida Task Force 3 and theirdogs head into work at the site of the collapse at the Champlain Towers South Condo in Surfside on Monday.
EMILY MICHOT emichot@miamiheral­d.com Search and rescue crews from Florida Task Force 3 and theirdogs head into work at the site of the collapse at the Champlain Towers South Condo in Surfside on Monday.

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