Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Mayor: 5 missing in Iowa collapse

Some say city is moving too quickly on demolition

- Scott McFetridge and Hannah Fingerhut

DES MOINES, Iowa – Five people remain unaccounte­d for, including two people whose remains may be in a pile of rubble at the site of a partially collapsed apartment building, officials of the city of Davenport, Iowa, said Tuesday.

Mayor Mike Matson confirmed the numbers at a news conference following criticism that the city was moving too quickly toward demolishin­g the building before making sure that no one is still inside. Protests erupted after a woman was rescued Monday night, hours after the city ordered the demolition to begin as early as Tuesday.

A family member of one of the missing people also spoke, pleading with people to understand that authoritie­s want to bring the remains of the six-story building down in a controlled way without dumping more material onto the rubble pile.

The building is “unstable and continues to worsen as time progresses,” Fire Marshal James Morris said. “It’s the opinion of the structural engineer that any additional search operations in the area of that pile of debris should be avoided due to potential collapse. We are currently evaluating the risk assessment of where we can go back into that building to do this other search.”

“We’re very sympatheti­c to the possibilit­y that there’s two people” still left inside, Morris said as he fought back tears.

Protesters carried signs Tuesday morning near the building site, saying “Find Them First” and “Who is in the Rubble?” Some used a megaphone to shout out names of building residents.

City officials said rescue crews escorted 12 people from the building shortly after a middle section collapsed at about 5 p.m. Sunday, and rescued several others, including one person who was taken to safety overnight Sunday.

By Monday morning, Fire Chief Michael Carlsten told reporters: “No known individual­s are trapped in that facility.” Authoritie­s said they would soon shift from a rescue operation to a recovery operation.

The city then issued a statement saying that the owner had been served with an order for demolition that was expected to begin Tuesday morning. That prompted many people to turn to Facebook, naming loved ones who were unaccounte­d for, and expressing concern that the building was being demolished too quickly.

On Tuesday morning, the city issued a new statement, saying it has been “continuall­y evaluating the timing of the demolition.” The statement said demolition “is a multi-phase process that includes permitting and staging of equipment that will begin today. The timing of the physical demolition of the property is still be evaluated. The building remains structural­ly insecure and in imminent danger of collapse.”

The woman was rescued at about 8 p.m. Monday after calling her family for help, according to multiple news reports. A bystander’s video showed someone waving from a fourth-floor window to a fire department ladder truck below. A city statement late Monday said an injured woman had been extricated, but it wasn’t immediatel­y clear if this was the same person referred to in news reports. Authoritie­s did not immediatel­y respond to a message seeking comment.

When firefighters initially arrived Sunday, they immediatel­y took action, saving lives at great risk to their personal safety, city officials said.

“There was a lot of screams, a lot of cries, a lot of people saying ‘Help!’ when the building came down,” Tadd Mashovec, a resident of the building, told KCCI-TV. “But that did not last, and two or three minutes, and then the whole area was silent.”

Carlsten said the back of the complex had separated from the rest of the building, and authoritie­s found a gas leak.

It wasn’t clear what immediatel­y caused the collapse, which left a gaping hole in the center of what was once the Davenport Hotel, a building listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. Built in 1907, the brick over steel and concrete structure had been renovated into a mixed-use building with residentia­l and commercial spaces.

Work was being done on the building’s exterior at the time of the collapse, said Rich Oswald, the city’s director of developmen­t and neighborho­od services. Reports of falling bricks were part of that work, and the building’s owner had a permit for the project, Oswald said.

Gov. Kim Reynolds issued a disaster proclamati­on for Scott County, activating the Iowa Individual Assistance Grant Program and the Disaster Case Management Program for the residents left homeless. The property owner was served Monday with a demolition order, and residents were prevented from going back inside to remove their belongings, due to the building’s unstable condition.

Authoritie­s confirmed that multiple residents had complained of unmet maintenanc­e problems. Quad-City Times reported nearly 20 permits were filed in 2022, mainly for plumbing or electrical issues, according to the county assessor’s office.

The collapse didn’t surprise Schlaan Murray, a former resident, who told The Associated Press that his one-year stay there was “a nightmare.”

Murray, 46, moved into his apartment in February 2022 and almost immediatel­y began having issues – the heat and air conditione­r didn’t work, and there were plumbing problems in the bathroom. Multiple calls to the management company rarely got a response, and when a maintenanc­e person did stop by, they never completely fixed the problems, he said.

“They would come in and put some caulk on it,” he said. “But it needed more than that. They didn’t fix stuff, they just patched it up.”

He questions how the building passed inspection­s.

“It was horrible,” Murray said. Murray said he moved out a month before his lease was up in March, and still hasn’t received his security deposit. Despite deplorable conditions, many residents were like him, he said, struggling to come up with the first and last month’s rent, plus security deposit, required to move elsewhere.

 ?? SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES ?? Clothes still hang in a closet after a portion of an apartment building collapsed in Davenport, Iowa. The building owner was served Monday with a demolition order, and residents were prevented from going back inside to remove their belongings, due to the building’s unstable condition.
SCOTT OLSON/GETTY IMAGES Clothes still hang in a closet after a portion of an apartment building collapsed in Davenport, Iowa. The building owner was served Monday with a demolition order, and residents were prevented from going back inside to remove their belongings, due to the building’s unstable condition.

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