Miami Herald

Ex-Surfside official takes leave from Doral post after collapse

- BY AARON LEIBOWITZ aleibowitz@miamiheral­d.com

Rosendo “Ross” Prieto, the former top building official for the town of Surfside, has taken a leave of absence as Doral’s temporary building official after reports that he reviewed a troubling 2018 report about the Champlain Towers South Condo and then told residents the building appeared to be

“in very good shape.”

The city of Doral said in a statement that Prieto is taking a leave from C.A.P. Government Inc., a firm that provides building department services to government clients. Prieto, who left his post in Surfside last November, had been assigned in May by C.A.P. to work for Doral, one of Miami-Dade’s fastest-growing cities.

“On June 28, 2021,

C.A.P. Government, Inc. notified the City of Doral that Mr. Prieto was on a leave of absence and assigned another employee to assist the City of Doral Building Department on a temporary basis,” Doral spokeswoma­n Maggie Santos said.

Edie Ousley, a spokeswoma­n for C.A.P., confirmed that Prieto was taking a leave of absence. She declined to comment on whether the move was voluntary.

Doral has contracted with C.A.P. Government Inc. for building department services since 2018. The arrangemen­t renewed in April shows the city pays the firm at hourly rates for various functions: $77.50 for inspection services, $87.50 for review of various plans, including mechanical and electrical plans, and $125 for review of structural plans.

Prieto did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

He has come under scrutiny in recent days after the catastroph­ic partial collapse of Champlain Towers South that killed at least 12 people and left 149 unaccounte­d for as of Tuesday evening.

One month after engineer Frank Morabito flagged “major structural damage” at the building in October 2018, Prieto attended a condo associatio­n meeting and told the board he had reviewed the report and believed the building was in good shape, according to minutes from the meeting obtained by the Miami Herald.

Records released by Surfside show that a member of the condo board, Mara Chouela, sent the engineer’s report to Prieto two days before the meeting, asked Prieto to attend the meeting and met with

Prieto in his office to discuss the matter beforehand.

“Thank you so much for having us in your office. We appreciate your time a lot. We would like to invite you to our board meeting on [Thursday, Nov. 15, 2018] at 7:30 to explain the facts of the 40-year inspection,” Chouela wrote.

Prieto told the Herald this past Saturday that he did not recall receiving the report and did not recall any major concerns with the building, adding: “If there had been, they would have been addressed right away.”

On Sunday, after NPR reported that he had attended the board meeting, Prieto declined to clarify his statements from the prior day, citing a lawyer’s advice.

The morning after attending the November 2018 meeting, Prieto emailed then-town manager Guillermo Olmedillo to report that “the response was very positive from everyone in the room,” and that he was impressed with the proactive approach of the condo associatio­n to its upcoming required 40-year recertific­ation.

The recertific­ation process mandates that, once a structure turns 40, its owners must hire a registered architect or profession­al engineer to do electrical and structural inspection­s within 90 days of receiving notice from the town.

Then, if repairs are found to be necessary, the owner gets 150 days to complete them. The costs of repairs can be apportione­d among the unit owners. And if the town’s building official determines the building to be unsafe, the case gets forwarded to the county’s Unsafe Structures Board for review.

Champlain Towers South hired Morabito, the engineer, in 2018 to assess what repairs were needed before the 40-year inspection process formally began. Surfside officials said they had not yet received a final report due this year that would have required Prieto’s sign-off.

Prieto has worked for several municipali­ties, including Miami Shores and Miami Beach, prior to his stint in Surfside and then Doral. In 1997, he was the assistant director of building and zoning in Miami Shores when the Biscayne Kennel Club prematurel­y collapsed on workers during a demolition project, killing two brothers from Broward County — Charles Schwab, 36, of Coral Springs, and William Schwab, 31, of Hollywood — and injuring three others.

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Ross Prieto

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