By Jessica Rowe

A demolition expert at the CTV building collapse has criticised the use of a human chain to remove rubble as a waste of time.

He told the coroner's inquest into the deaths of eight people who survived the initial collapse that machinery would have been a far more effective way of getting to survivors.

Southern Demolition owner Alan Edge arrived at the CTV building site two hours after it collapsed with three diggers and five staff.He says rescue workers who formed a human chain to remove debris by hand were wasting crucial time.

Having 20 people removing rubble might feel good but it was achieving nothing, he says.

Mr Edge was frustrated that he was unable to use his heavy machinery.

We could remove the debris [in] a much faster amount of time.

Jason Campbell used his crane to lift some of the first fire fighters on the scene to the top of the building's burning lift shaft to check for survivors.As time went on, he says Urban Search and Rescue (USAR) took over and demolition workers given a back seat.

"We got told USAR think like rescuing people, think like recovering people, contractors are all rip, sh** and bust, Mr Edge says.

Douglas Watt who joined the rescue soon after the quake struck pulled a woman from the rubble.

Read this article:
Machines needed in CTV rescue - demolition expert

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November 2, 2012 at 12:13 am by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Demolition