Surfside: The search for the victim of the collapse of the high condominium in the Miami area reached the 14th day on Wednesday, with the death toll at 46, the score was still not counted for and the authorities sounded gloomy.
Assistant Head of the Miami-Dade Fire Chief of the Gaide Jadallah room told family members in a personal direction Wednesday that workers had attracted 10 bodies and more people left from the debris, raising the dead.
The crew “did the removal of a significant pile,” he said.
“They can go down to various regions to check.” Workers on Tuesday dug concrete powder where the Champlain Tower of the South Building in Surfside had stood up, filling a bucket that was revealed the line to be emptied and then returned.
Look at the panting search, in the video released Tuesday by the Miami-Dade County API Department, came because eight more deaths were announced – the most for one day since the search began.
It also came when the rain and wind from the tropical storm Elsa disturbed efforts, even though the storm was on track to make the landing far across the country.
Finders did not find new signs that survived, and even though the authorities said their mission was still directed to find people living, they sounded more gloomy.
“At present, we are in search and rescue mode,” District Police Director, Freddy Ramirez, said at a press conference Tuesday night.
He immediately added: “Our main goal is currently carrying family closure.” No one was saved from the site since the first hour after the building collapsed on June 24 when many residents fell asleep.
Finders are still looking for open space inside the debris in the debris where additional victims can be found, said the District Fire Extinguisher, Alan Cominsky.
“Unfortunately, we don’t see anything positive,” he said.
Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said lost families were preparing news about “tragic losses.” He said President Joe Biden, who visited the area last week, was named Tuesday to offer his sustainable support.
“I think everyone will be ready when it’s time to move to the next phase,” he said.
Reporter got their direct view on Tuesday’s site, even though it was limited to the building parts that workers ripped off on Sunday after the collapse initially stood but was very unstable.
The stack of concrete was destroyed and bent steel stood around 30 feet (9 meters) and stretched around half the length of the soccer field.
A pair of backhoes pulled debris from the stack, which blocked every view of the search effort.
Severe weather from ELSA search efforts blocked to a certain level.
Lightning forced rescuers to pause their jobs for two hours Tuesday morning, assistant head of Raide Badallah firefight.
And the wind of 20 mph (32 kph), with a stronger gusts, hampering efforts to move heavy debris with cranes, officials said.
However, the toughest wind and rain storms will bypass surfside and Miami’s neighbors when Elsa weakens along the road to the land estimated somewhere between Tampa Bay and Big Bend Florida.
The crew has removed 124 tons (tons of 112 metrics) debris from the site, Cominsky said.
Debris is being sorted and stored in the warehouse as a potential evidence in the investigation of why the building collapsed, officials said.
Workers have been released to find a wider area because the remaining unstable buildings are destroyed.