Philadelphia officials are facing questions over whether the building collapse that killed six people on Wednesday could have been prevented.
Mayor Michael Nutter and the city's commissioner of licenses and inspections, Carlton Williams, said today that they did not follow up on complaints about the working conditions at the Center City demolition site where a four-story building toppled over Wednesday.
City officials said that a routine inspection had found no violations at the property before demolition began. Williams said that inspectors had visited an adjoining property in May after complaints were lodged, but they found no violations and did not return to the Market Street site again before Wednesday.
"No subsequent inspection occurred to indicate there was any unsafe conditions," Williams said. "We did not follow up and we are definitely looking into that."
Nutter promised a "wide-ranging inspection" into how and why the building collapsed.
"We are 24 hours into the incident, and we have a lot of work to do into why it happened and how did it happen, and going forward how to prevent it from happening anywhere else in the city," Nutter said today.
Woman Trapped in Philadelphia Building Collapse
Dino Hazell/AP Photo
Emergency personnel respond to a building... View Full SizeBridge Collapse: Moments of Terror Watch VideoJune 29, 1995: S. Korea Building Collapse Watch VideoWorkers Survive Roof Collapse Caused by Snow Watch VideoNutter and Williams made their statements in response to questions from reporters about a slew of complaints and 311 calls that had reportedly been made to the city about the unsafe conditions at the site in the weeks leading up to the collapse.
At least 20 people were caught in falling debris when the building collapsed Wednesday around 10:45 a.m. An outer wall of the building that was being demolished fell outward and onto a two-story building next door that housed a Salvation Army Thrift Shop, according to city officials.
Fourteen individuals were treated for injuries, most of which were minor, according to hospital officials. Six individuals had already died by the time rescuers found them in the rubble.
See the Philadelphia Building When it Collapsed Wednesday
Two construction workers that were doing work on nearby buildings told the Philadelphia Inquirer today that they watched the demolition in disbelief because of the unsafe practices of the demolition workers.
"Never in all my years have I ever, ever, ever seen this," Steve Cramer told the paper. "It was just a total disregard for safety. We [predicted] this last week. I can't believe they allowed the thrift store to be open."
Joe Hauser, another worker, echoed Cramer's concerns, saying that he was planning on saying something to the workers on the very day of the collapse.
"I said, 'That's it, at lunch I'm going to go over there and say something, I have to, I can't go with this no more,'" Hauser told the paper.
On Wednesday, Williams and Nutter said that the building had up-to-date permits for the demolition, noting that both the owner and construction company had their paperwork in order.
The property's owner, STB Investments of New York City, released a statement Wednesday expressing sympathy for the victims.
Richard Basciano, an owner of the company, owned many properties in Philadelphia and New York and was once dubbed "the undisputed king of Times Square porn" in New York newspapers for his ownership of adult businesses.
"Our thoughts and prayers go out to the people affected by this tragic event. Please know that we are committed to working with the City of Philadelphia and other authorities to determine what happened today," the statement read.
Nutter said that the search would continue today, and that the city would not release names of the dead until the end of the day.
Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNE9CAUdUbkQwZnVJfbpS-RHsblxpA&url=http://abcnews.go.com/US/building-collapse-preventable-philly-officials-grilled-inspections/story?id=19339101
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