This rescue effort is one of the biggest screw ups in recent history.
This rescue effort is one of the biggest screw ups in recent history.
I agree that emergency people have to reduce or eliminate the risk. But there is always a way to mount a rescue effort safely, its just a matter of having the right expertise and equipment. If the current team didn't have the ability, then that's a reason for getting another rescue team, not stopping the rescue effort.
You mean friends and family who know that someone was alive under the rubble? Is that who you mean by "spectators"?
I doubt I feel as angry as they do, knowing that some was alive under the pile of rubble and they've been abandonned.
If the one rescue team lacks the equipment or expertise to mount a rescue effort, that doesn't mean the rescue effort stops, that means that another team with the people and resources is brought in. There is always a way to mount a rescue. It may be slow or inefficient, but a way always exists. If they have to, they should tear that building apart brick by brick.
That articulating arm should have been on it's way by Sunday morning at the absolute latest. I know it's easy to be an armchair quarterback, especially in hindsight, but when people are burried in rubble you don't go pull out your MS Project. Dig with your GD fingernails if you have to. If I had a loved one who was burried there I'd be livid right now.
They retrieved 3 bodies... no one else was under the rubble.
What happened to the other 9 unaccounted for?
Which would mean that you agree with me. The rescue effort never stopped. If plan a is unsafe, the rescue effort continues by moving on to plan bActually it does mean that you stop. An incident commander would be remiss in his duties to put his resources in danger. The proper move is to pul back and manage the scene as best you can until qualified and properly equipped crews can be brought in.
Refer to rule #1.
Which would mean that you agree with me. The rescue effort never stopped. If plan a is unsafe, the rescue effort continues by moving on to plan b
But that's not what happened. When plan a never worked, they rescue effort stopped. They didn't move on to plan b. They just gave up. The rescue effort started up again with a plan b but only after the application of extreme external pressure.
That's complete BS! I don't blame the rescue workers involved in plan a. I'm sure they did their best. But as soon as they gave up due to safety reasons, the bureaucrats should have had a plan b ready. Not only didn't they have a plan b ready, they hadn't even considered a plan b. That's the screw up that makes me angry.
What happened to the other 9 unaccounted for?
Put it into context for you:
Canada News: Elliot Lake mall roof collapse: Two bodies recovered from debris - thestar.com
"He defended perceived delays in HUSAR’s work getting to the victims, who had been inside the rubble since the roof of the mall collapsed Saturday afternoon.
Rescue required new and heavier equipment to be brought in and a change of plans to circumvent the danger to crews at the core of the collapse, he said.
“When the final decision was made to leave the building, I didn’t have the equipment to continue,” a sombre Neadles told the auditorium packed with Elliot Lake residents."
Let me put this into context for you.
The decision to bring in heavy equipment and continue the rescue effort happened about 12 hours after the initial effort was abandoned. During that 12 hour period, nothing happened. The rescue effort was called off and their were no plans to do anything else. Only after the local residents threatened to go in themselves, the Premiere and Prime Minister weighed in, did the rescue effort resume. That 12 hour delay may have been a contributing factor to at least one of the deaths.