SURFSIDE, Fla. — As the days tick away, the search for survivors in the Surfside condominium collapse becomes more and more bleak.
But the more than 200 men and women involved in the around-the-clock search effort remain hopeful that they will find someone alive in the rubble of last Thursday's partial collapse of the Champlain Towers South building.
Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett said Tuesday that, among the questions posed during a meeting with family members of the 150 people still missing, search-and-rescue officials were asked, "How long can people survive under the rubble?"
"There didn't seem to be a good answer to that," Burkett said.
Although the chance of survival decreases with each passing day, miracles do happen.
After the devastating Haiti earthquake in January 2010 that killed more than 300,000 people, including 12 Lynn University students and two faculty members, a man was rescued from the rubble of a Port-au-Prince shop 14 days after the 7.0-magnitude quake struck.
Then there was a Virginia man who recently spoke with the NBC affiliate in Washington, recalling the time in 2001 when he spent five days trapped in the rubble of a collapsed apartment building in India before being rescued.
"Don't give up on hope," he said. "Don't give up, because the people who came to rescue me, they never gave up."
The most miraculous rescue came in May 2013, when a woman was pulled from the ruins of a factory building in Bangladesh, 17 days after it collapsed.
Burkett said he was given a copy of a news article about the Bangladesh rescue, which he shared with the families.
"Nobody's giving up hope here," he said. "Nobody's stopping. The work goes on full force. We're dedicated to get everyone out of that pile of rubble and reunite them with their families."