New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Searchers at collapse site ‘not seeing anything positive’

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SURFSIDE, Fla. — Officials overseeing the search at the site of the Florida condominiu­m collapse sounded increasing­ly somber Tuesday about the prospects for finding anyone alive, saying they have detected no new signs of life in the rubble as the death toll climbed to 36.

Crews in yellow helmets and blue jumpsuits searched the debris for a 13th day while wind and rain from the outer bands of Tropical Storm Elsa complicate­d their efforts. Video released by the Miami-Dade County Fire Rescue Department showed workers lugging pickaxes and power saws through piles of concrete rubble barbed with snapped steel rebar. Other searchers could be seen digging with gloved hands through pulverized concrete and dumping shovels of debris into large buckets.

Search-and-rescue workers continued to look for open spaces where people might be found alive nearly two weeks after the disaster struck at the Champlain Towers South building in Surfside.

“We’re actively searching as aggressive­ly as we can,” MiamiDade County Fire Chief Alan Cominsky said at a news conference. But he added: “Unfortunat­ely, we are not seeing anything positive. The key things — void spaces, living spaces — we’re not seeing anything like that.”

While officials still call the efforts a search-and-rescue operation, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said families of those still missing are preparing for news of “tragic loss.”

“I think everybody will be ready when it’s time to move to the next phase,” said Levine Cava, who stressed that crews would use the same care as they go through the rubble even after their focus shifts from searching for survivors to recovering the dead.

“Really, you will not see a difference,” she said. “We will carefully search for bodies and belongings, and to catalog and respectful­ly deal with any remains that we find.”

No one has been rescued alive since the first hours after the collapse, which struck early on June 24, when many of the building’s residents were asleep.

Officials announced Tuesday that teams had recovered eight additional bodies — the highest one-day total since the collapse. More than 100 people remain unaccounte­d for.

Severe weather from Elsa threatened to hinder search efforts. Lightning forced rescuers to pause their work for two hours early Tuesday, MiamiDade Assistant Fire Chief Raide Jadallah said. And stiff winds of 20 mph, with stronger gusts, hampered efforts to move heavy debris with cranes, officials said.

However, the storm’s heaviest winds and rain were expected to bypass Surfside and neighborin­g Miami as Elsa strengthen­ed before making landfall somewhere between Tampa Bay and Florida’s Big Bend on a path across northern Florida.

“Active search and rescue continued throughout the night, and these teams continue through extremely adverse and challengin­g conditions,” Levine Cava said. “Through the rain and through the wind, they have continued searching.”

 ?? Carl Juste / Associated Press ?? Volunteers along with locals replace dead flowers with fresh ones prior to the Guara family's burial at St. Joseph Catholic Church on Tuesday in Miami Beach, Fla.
Carl Juste / Associated Press Volunteers along with locals replace dead flowers with fresh ones prior to the Guara family's burial at St. Joseph Catholic Church on Tuesday in Miami Beach, Fla.

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