Miami Beach

Rescue workers getting frustrated to tears as they dig at the Surfside condo collapse

Piece by piece, the rescue workers dig at the multilayered mound of rubble. Moment by moment, time passes without finding life in the collapsed part of Champlain Towers South condominium building.

And that’s starting to get to people trained to walk into catastrophes and walk out with saved lives.

“Sometimes all you can do is find a small, quiet corner and just cry for a little while, and let out some of that pressure that you’ve got building up,” said Margarita Castro, a member of the search and rescue team and a Miami-Dade firefighter for 17 years. “We each have our moments of strength. We each have our moments of weakness.”

The nature of the debris makes removal the digging version of that nightmare where you can’t move as fast as you need because your legs won’t let you.

“Again, with this type of collapse and what we’re seeing in the debris, it’s very difficult to move any of the large concrete slabs,” Miami-Dade Fire Rescue Director Alan Cominsky said Wednesday. “It’s just pulverized underneath. And, crumbling when we’re trying to move them.”

Surfside, Florida, June 30, 2021 - A member of a search and rescue team makes his way to the site of the collapse under a heavy downpour.
Surfside, Florida, June 30, 2021 - A member of a search and rescue team makes his way to the site of the collapse under a heavy downpour. Jose A Iglesias jiglesias@elnuevoherald.com

The hills and valleys of ruins are peppered with toys, wallets, passports, pictures. A Dora the Explorer backpack. Board games. Artifacts from households that are sent sliding down a black plastic half-pipe from the top of the pile down to the ground as workers methodically peel back layers of rubble.

Remnants of life reminding them of all those they haven’t found yet.

Castro updates families regularly, difficult conversations that sometimes include painfully impossible requests.

“I’ve had a few moments, especially when I’ve had people come up to me and tell me, ‘Please find my kids, please find my grandchildren,’ ” Castro said. “That wrenches. That pulls really hard at your heart because you want to. You want to bring those kids right back, but all we can do is just give them a big hug, and hold them and say that we’re doing the best that we can.”

Search and rescue teams look for survivors at the 12-story oceanfront condo, Champlain Towers South on Tuesday, June 29, 2021
Search and rescue teams look for survivors at the 12-story oceanfront condo, Champlain Towers South on Tuesday, June 29, 2021 Pedro Portal pportal@miamiherald.com
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This story was originally published June 30, 2021 at 4:12 PM with the headline "Rescue workers getting frustrated to tears as they dig at the Surfside condo collapse."

Follow More of Our Reporting on Condo Collapse: Disaster in Surfside

David J. Neal
Miami Herald
Since 1989, David J. Neal’s domain at the Miami Herald has expanded to include writing about Panthers (NHL and FIU), Dolphins, old school animation, food safety, fraud, naughty lawyers, bad doctors and all manner of breaking news. He drinks coladas whole. He does not work Indianapolis 500 Race Day.
Joey Flechas
Miami Herald
Joey Flechas is an associate editor and enterprise reporter for the Herald. He previously covered government and public affairs in the city of Miami. He was part of the team that won the 2022 Pulitzer Prize for reporting on the collapse of a residential condo building in Surfside, FL. He won a Sunshine State award for revealing a Miami Beach political candidate’s ties to an illegal campaign donation. He graduated from the University of Florida. He joined the Herald in 2013.
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