Miami Herald

Firefighte­rs leave food, water for cat left behind on tower’s 4th floor

- BY CHARLES RABIN crabin@miamiheral­d.com Charles Rabin: 305-376-3672, @chuckrabin

City of Miami firefighte­rs on Monday, using a cherry-picker truck, left food and water on the balcony of a still unstable fourth-floor apartment at Champlain Towers for a cat named Coco left behind after the condo collapsed last week.

In the immediate hours after the massive failure, the focus was on rescuing residents trapped in the still-standing part of the 12-story building in Surfside.

But now, five days in and with hundreds of search teams still looking for survivors or human remains, some effort is also turning toward abandoned pets.

It’s unclear how many might have been left behind. On Monday night, a drone was sent up to look into the eastern side of the building but none were spotted.

But there apparently is at least one cat, a black and white tuxedo named Coco — owned by an 89year-old woman and her daughter who were pulled to safety from a corner fourth-floor apartment by firefighte­rs after the early morning collapse. After hearing about the cat, Miami Commission Chair Ken Russell helped initiate the move to feed Coco and look for other lost pets.

Russell said the door to the wraparound balcony, which is partially lost, is open, giving the cat access to the outside. But trying to rescue the cat right now is considered too dangerous. The cat has apparently been seen on the west side of the apartment facing Collins Avenue.

The family’s dog, named Rigatoni, was rescued by

firefighte­rs on Thursday along with the woman and

her daughter.

“But in the rush of evacuating an unstable building,” Russell said, “firefighte­rs could not wait to find the cat.”

Russell said he was told about Coco by a constituen­t who was friends with the people who lived in the fourth-floor apartment and he contacted Miami Fire Rescue about feeding the cat.

By Tuesday morning, he said he had been in contact with Friends of Miami Animals and was working on creating a database of missing pets so they can be reunited with family if they are found.

The hope is also that at this point any rescued pet would offer some muchneeded comfort to family members who have lost so much in the unpreceden­ted disaster.

 ??  ?? Rescuers placed food and water on the fourth-floor balcony of a damaged apartment at Champlain Towers South on Monday for Coco, who survived the collapse.
Rescuers placed food and water on the fourth-floor balcony of a damaged apartment at Champlain Towers South on Monday for Coco, who survived the collapse.

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