Thursday, July 1, 2021

Official Who Said Champlain Towers Was Sound Is On A Leave Of Absence Updated June 29, 2021 Vanessa Romo

 

Official Who Said Champlain Towers Was Sound Is On A Leave Of Absence

Crews work in the rubble of Champlain Towers South in Surfside, Fla.

Gerald Herbert/AP

The former top building official who assured residents of the Champlain Towers South condominium that it was in "very good shape," two years before the 12-story building collapsed, is on a leave of absence from his current job.

Rosendo Prieto examined the 40-year recertification inspection of the Surfside, Fla., condo as recently as November 2018.

About a year later he left the city of Surfside and was employed by C.A.P. Government Inc., a private firm that provides outsourced building assistance to municipal governments, and was assigned to work in the city of Doral, where he appeared to be employed until news about his involvement in the towers certification became public.

The Champlain Towers building partially collapsed early Thursday morning. As of Tuesday, 12 people are confirmed dead and over 149 others are missing. Officials say search and rescue crews will continue to comb through the rubble despite not detecting any signs of life.

On Tuesday, Edie Ousley, a spokeswoman for C.A.P. Government Inc., confirmed to NPR that Prieto "is on a leave of absence" but could not provide details, saying it is a human resources issue.

Prieto did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

He reviewed the 2018 engineering report that found widespread problems threatening the structural integrity of the tower, which required extensive repairs "in the near future."

As NPR reported exclusively on Sunday, Prieto attended a board meeting of the condominium's association a few weeks after that report and told condo residents their building appeared to be "in very good shape."

Death Toll Climbs To 18 In The Surfside Condo Collapse, With 145 Missing Updated June 30, 2021 JASON BRESLOW

 

Death Toll Climbs To 18 In The Surfside Condo Collapse, With 145 Missing

Search and rescue personnel work alongside heavy machinery Wednesday to sift through the rubble at the Champlain Towers South condo building, where scores of people remain missing almost a week after it partially collapsed.

Lynne Sladky/AP

The bodies of four more victims have been recovered from the rubble of the Champlain Towers South in Surfside, Fla., bringing the death toll from last week's partial collapse to 18.

Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said two of the dead were children, ages 4 and 10.

Authorities leading the rescue and recovery operation said Wednesday that 145 victims remain missing or unaccounted for.

Ray Jadallah, the assistant fire chief of Miami-Dade County, told family members at a morning briefing that the four bodies were discovered on Tuesday night, officials said.

Rescue crews are now in their seventh day of around-the-clock searching of the massive pile of rubble left behind by last Thursday's partial collapse of the 12-story-tall building. Thursday was also the last day crews pulled anyone from rubble alive.

Authorities in Florida said that rescuers would continue the search for victims.

"Rest assured those folks are going to be working on that pile, and it's not going to stop, and they're going to get answers one way or another," Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis told reporters on Wednesday.

Officials have not yet released names for all 16 people who have been confirmed dead, but earlier in the day they issued one more: 92-year-old Hilda Noriega. Miami-Dade Police said her body had been recovered on Tuesday.

"The Noriega's have lost the 'heart and soul' and 'matriarch' of their family, but will get through this time by embracing the unconditional love Hilda was known for," read a statement from the family shared by the city of North Bay Village in Florida.

Search teams say they have so far removed more than 3 million pounds of wreckage and debris from the site of the collapse.

The president and first lady are scheduled to visit the site on Thursday.

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