Monday, March 28, 2011

Retired Windsor Terrace firefighter George Bachmann pens 9/11 memoir


Retired Windsor Terrace firefighter George Bachmann's memory of 9/11 is more vivid today than it was for years after the terrorist attack.

In his memoir, "Tara's Cross," Bachmann chronicles how he overcame memory loss and healed deep emotional wounds as a survivor who narrowly escaped death at the twin towers.

"There's been a lot of soul-searching," said Bachmann, 59. "I'm not a big hero. I didn't save anyone on 9/11 other than my own life."

Bachmann, who worked at the Liberty St. firehouse across the street from Ground Zero, didn't remember anything about 9/11 because falling debris outside the north tower had trapped him, breaking his back and cracking his skull.


ROCKFORD — Tom Longo was still in bed on his 21st birthday — Sept. 11, 2001 — when his wife quickly awakened him from his sleep and turned his attention to the television.

He watched in astonishment as terrorist hijackers flew airplanes into the twin towers of the World Trade Center.

“When she woke me up, I thought it was a movie she was showing me,” Longo said. “I could not believe it was happening. … I sat there kind of watching it, not saying anything.”

Longo, along with his wife, Jennifer, and two sons, Tommy, 10, and Drake, 4, came downtown Saturday afternoon for a special ceremony unveiling two pieces of steel from the World Trade Center.

The steel will be a part of the Winnebago County 9/11 Emergency Responders Memorial, which will be constructed near the county’s Criminal Justice Center on West State Street.

“This symbol means sacrifice, what a firefighter, a police officer an EMT would do to try to save somebody else,” said Rockford Fire Department Lt. Will Pederson, chairman of the memorial committee. “Emergency responders are willing to step up and do things that others won’t.”

Pederson, along with fire Lt. Kyle Hill, went to New York City to pick up the steel.

“I am just overwhelmed with how this whole thing has come together,” Pederson said. “This is a part of New York City coming here, and we are going to take care of it.”

The memorial will have sculptures of a firefighter, police officer and an EMT overlooking the steel beams, each about 7 feet long and about 1,000 pounds, Pederson said. It also will feature two 20-foot towers that will stand atop granite, representing the Pentagon. Forty trees will be planted, representing each passenger on United Flight 93 that crashed in a field in Pennsylvania.

Heather Weiss of Rockford helped escort the steel downtown Saturday with her husband’s motorcycle group. Fire and police agencies from throughout the county also helped lead a procession from the Clock Tower to the MetroCentre.

“I think this is awesome,” she said. “It brought back so many emotions for me from when it happened. It was really cool to be able to escort it down here.”

The memorial committee is working to raise $911,000 by the 10-year anniversary of 9/11, Pederson said. More information about the memorial and ways to donate can be found at
winnebago911memorial.org.

Reach staff writer Matt Williams at mwilliams@rrstar.com or 815-987-1389.

Chatham County welcomes World Trade Center wreckage


A piece of wreckage from the World Trade Center displayed in Chatham County Saturday will become the centerpiece of a memorial to the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

The 19-foot-long beam was displayed on the 9-11 Memorial Tribute Trail through the county, escorted by firefighters, law enforcement, EMS workers and forestry agents. It made stops in Pittsboro, Goldston and Siler City.

"The intent of the memorial is to honor the many heroes of 9-11, including firefighters, rescue teams and law enforcement officers," County Commissioner Pam Stewart said.

Fire Marshal Thomas Bender said the county requested a piece of the World Trade Center some time ago and only recently found out it would receive one.

Goldston firefighter Jody Allen volunteered to take his personal diesel truck and trailer up to get the beam at the Port Authority in New York City Thursday. The Lowe's Home Improvement store in Pittsboro donated two large American flags to drape the truck and beam. Slideshow World Trade Center beam arrives in Chatham County World Trade Center beam comes to Chatham County

"After the Tribute Trail, our next steps are more challenging," said Don Lein, president of the Chatham Parks Foundation.

The beam from the World Trade Center will become the centerpiece of a memorial in Chatham County to the emergency responders and others who lost their lives on Sept. 11, 2001.

"The 9-11 attacks claimed the lives of 2,977 victims, including 411 emergency workers. It changed our nation and each of us individually," Stewart said.

A five-member planning committee is selecting a location and fund-raising for the memorial.

"We want it to the be the type of memorial that encourages people to honor and reflect on the lives lost and their own personal connection to the lives lost and their own personal connection to the 9-11 tragedy," Lein said.

The county hopes to have the memorial open this fall in time for the 10th anniversary of the attacks.

"This is a huge project that will require a lot of work from many people in Chatham County," Stewart said. "But I have faith that by working together, we can get this done, so we have a memorial that will be a source of pride throughout the region, not just Chatham County."

Anyone who wishes to donate or volunteer to help build the 9-11 Memorial can call Don Lein, with the Chatham Parks Foundation, at 919-542-4790.

'The Empty Sky' 9/11 memorial in Jersey City will be ready by 10th anniversary


Officials said the "Empty Sky" 9/11 Memorial at Liberty State Park in Jersey City may be completed and open by the 10th anniversary of the attacks, The Jersey Journal reports.

The memorial will consist of two steel-plated walls that form a walkway to the Hudson River that will give visitors the feeling of walking between the World Trade Center towers.

The names of 9/11 victims will be engraved on the steel interior of the memorial.

Some, however, have slammed the planned memorial for obstructing views of the Manhattan skyline.

Do you think the Empty Sky memorial being built in Liberty State Park will be a fitting tribute to those who died in the World Trade Center on 9/11? Vote in our Daily Poll.

Full story from The Jersey Journal:
'EMPTY SKY' PROMISE: 9/11 memorial will be ready for anniversary

Related coverage from The Jersey Journal:
Fundraiser for 9/11 memorial set for May

Monday, March 21, 2011

58 storeys and counting... 'Freedom Tower' rises above Ground Zero to take its place on the New York skyline



: Its steel frame, already clad in glass on lower floors, now stands 58 stories tall and is starting to inch above many of the skyscrapers that ring the site

FILE - In this Jan. 5, 2011 file photo, ironworkers align steel columns on the 52nd floor of One World Trade Center in New York

On top of the world: Ironworkers align steel columns high in the sky

The black-granite fountains and reflecting pools that mark the footprints of the fallen twin towers are almost finished.

The memorial plaza won't be complete when it opens on Sept. 11, 2011, and a tour of the site last week makes clear that work around it will continue for years.

Mud is still plentiful at ground level, and for now the site is dominated by the same concrete-grey shades that blanketed lower Manhattan after the 9/11 attacks.

But the agency that owned the trade center and has spent nearly a decade rebuilding it is aiming to deliver a memorial experience on 9/11/11 that closes one chapter and ushers in a new experience, where ground zero again becomes part of the city's everyday fabric.

'We want people to be able to see that downtown does have this incredible future to it,' said Chris Ward, executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. 'The work will not be done on that day. What we hope will be done is the sense of frustration.'

For now, the complexity and scale of the construction is evident in every corner.

Workers labor around the clock. During the busiest shifts, around 2,800 people — mostly men — labour amid tangles and ravines of steel. In one steel cavern that will become a transit hub concourse, showers of orange sparks fly as welders install trusses weighing up to 50 tons.

From the top of One World Trade, the view is spectacular, as it was from the twin towers, even though the building stands at 680 feet, less than halfway to its planned 1,776-foot height.

Visitors to the upper floors can see the grand sweep of the Hudson River and New York Harbor, dotted with container ships, all the way to Sandy Hook at the northern tip of the Jersey Shore. People at ground level can now see the tower, too, from a growing number of places in the city and across the river in New Jersey.

A huge portion of the reconstruction of the trade center is taking place below ground. The underground halls that house the memorial are cavernous, and in their unfinished state look like some unexplored temple in an Indiana Jones movie.

The huge boxes that hold the waterfall pits visible from the surface are somehow suspended from the ceiling, held up by pillars that don't seem big enough to support the blocks' massive weight.




Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1368388/A-decade-9-11-Freedom-Tower-rises-ashes-Ground-Zero-tenth-anniversary-New-York-attack.html#ixzz1HIcdC6AR

WTC steel arrives in Wanaque


WANAQUE — Hundreds of residents lined Ringwood Avenue on Sunday as first responders from North Jersey led an emotional procession that included a piece of steel from the World Trade Center.

"People brought flags and children were saluting as we drove by," said Karen Cisco, president of the Wanaque First Aid Squad.

The 5 1/2-foot, 281-pound piece of steel, which came from an elevator in the North Tower, was transported by a squad ambulance.

"We were going to treat it like a patient, with dignity, honor, and give it the best treatment possible," Cisco said.

Buy this photo
John Balaga Sr., whose son John Jr. died at the World Trade Center, kissing a piece of steel from the tower as his wife, Frances, looked on during a procession Sunday in Wanaque.

In one of the day's most emotional moments, John Balaga Sr. of Wanaque, whose son, John Jr., 35, died in the World Trade Center attack, kissed the steel piece as his wife, Frances, stood by.

Four Wanaque squad members carried the steel piece past first responders from Bloomingdale, West Milford, Ringwood and Oakland. "It was very emotional for everybody," Wanaque police Detective Capt. Thomas Norton said.

The steel piece will be housed inside the squad building on Melrose Avenue until Sept. 10 — the day before the 10th anniversary of 9/11 — when it will go on display outside the squad building.

E-mail: bautista@northjersey.com

WANAQUE — Hundreds of residents lined Ringwood Avenue on Sunday as first responders from North Jersey led an emotional procession that included a piece of steel from the World Trade Center.

"People brought flags and children were saluting as we drove by," said Karen Cisco, president of the Wanaque First Aid Squad.

The 5 1/2-foot, 281-pound piece of steel, which came from an elevator in the North Tower, was transported by a squad ambulance.

"We were going to treat it like a patient, with dignity, honor, and give it the best treatment possible," Cisco said.

In one of the day's most emotional moments, John Balaga Sr. of Wanaque, whose son, John Jr., 35, died in the World Trade Center attack, kissed the steel piece as his wife, Frances, stood by.

Four Wanaque squad members carried the steel piece past first responders from Bloomingdale, West Milford, Ringwood and Oakland. "It was very emotional for everybody," Wanaque police Detective Capt. Thomas Norton said.

The steel piece will be housed inside the squad building on Melrose Avenue until Sept. 10 — the day before the 10th anniversary of 9/11 — when it will go on display outside the squad building.

E-mail: bautista@northjersey.com


Click here for more news from: Wanaque (including Haskell)

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Reservations for 9/11 Memorial to Begin in July




Work continues with just six months until 10-year anniversary


Reserving tickets to visit the Sept. 11 memorial will begin in July, as the project is on schedule to open on the 10th anniversary of the 2001 attacks, the memorial foundation president said Friday.

The public will be able to begin visiting the memorial on Sept. 12, 2011, a day after the families of victims attend a memorial service and tour the site, which will feature two waterfalls and the names of survivors inscribed in bronze

He stressed that tickets will be free. Visitors will only have to “pick a date, pick a time, print out their passes and come down,” he said.

For years after the memorial opens, access will be limited to a set number of people and mourners.

Ultimately, visitors will be able to approach the memorial and its green spaces and cobblestone plazas from all sides.

But for years visitors will be surrounded by construction of skyscrapers and a transit hub and may only use one entrance, and organizers will observe strict capacity limits for safety reasons.

Preliminary plans call for a limit of 1,500 visitors at a time, with special consideration being given to the relatives of Sept. 11 victims.

The 1,776-foot 1 World Trade Center, formerly known as the Freedom Tower, is being built just northwest of the memorial site and won't open until 2013. Hundreds of trees will still need to be planted, and cobblestones will need to be filled in to the 8-acre memorial plaza after Sept. 11, 2011.

A transit hub is under construction at the site until at least 2015, along with at least one other skyscraper planned for the site.

http://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/Reservations-for-911-Memorial-Tours-117835763.html



Thursday, March 10, 2011

Crescent Springs (Ohio) Receives WTC Steel Remnant

Crescent Springs firefighters drove to New York on Thursday to get a piece of steel from the World Trade Center.City officials said the piece will be part of a memorial in a local park across the street from the fire department. Firefighters carried the 4-foot-long, 200-pound piece of metal that symbolizes brotherhood within their own fire station."You couldn't grasp the whole concept of losing that many firefighters,” said Crescent Springs Fire Department Chief Jeff Wendt. It was the chief's idea to apply for Crescent Springs to get a piece of the WTC. After hundreds of piles of paperwork, including tax documents and letters from judges, Crescent Springs' application was approved."We hope that nobody ever forgets about 9/11. I think it's important that people can touch it, kids can touch it (and) realize (where) it was from. (They can) learn what 9/11 was, instead of it just being a piece of history," Wendt said.There is only one rule for anyone who obtains a piece of the trade center: they can't take it apart or cut it up. The piece should stand on its own, hopefully in time for the 10-year anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks.

http://www.wlwt.com/r/27156206/detail.html

East Northport To Get WTC Steel Beam For 9/11 Memorial


NEW YORK (1010 WINS) – One Long Island community is expected to have a very special addition to its annual September 11th memorial and vigil this year.

The East Northport Fire Department will be receiving an 8 foot, 7,000 pound steel World Trade Center beam on Thursday.

Firefighters, the NYPD and police from Nassau and Suffolk counties will transport the beam from John F. Kennedy Airport to the fire department headquarters on Larkfield Road and Ninth Avenue.

East Northport Fire Department Lieutenant Frank Giovinco spoke with 1010 WINS Wednesday and said the goal was to have a design made for the monument and put it on display for the community’s commemoration of the terrorist attacks.

“Hopefully by the 10th anniversary, this monument will be unveiled at our memorial ceremony on September 11th of this year,” Giovinco said.

In a news release, the fire department also said the beam would serve as a reminder of the 3,000 people killed “during the greatest attack on American soil – something that we should never forget

http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2011/03/09/east-northport-to-get-wtc-steel-beam-for-911-memorial/

Australia's prime minister brings fire helmet of 9/11 hero Kevin Dowdell to Capitol Hill


WASHINGTON - Australia's prime minister visited Capitol Hill on Wednesday and offered "a precious possession" - the tale of a fire helmet that proves the enduring legacy of 9/11's heroes.

It was a helmet signed by FDNY Lt. Kevin Dowdell in 1998 and given to Australians on a counterterror training trip in New York.

Three years later, terrorists killed Dowdell, of Rescue 4 in Queens.

The helmet came home last summer, after a Queensland firefighter, Robert Frey, found it on display. He realized what it would mean to Dowdell's 26-year-old son, James, now of Ladder 174 in East Flatbush.

"Rob came to America to give James the helmet his father signed - a precious possession, a last link to a father lost," Prime Minister Julia Gillard said.

"And I give you their story - a precious possession, too," she said, turning to the gallery where both men sat Wednesday.

"Rob, James. Good on you," she said, winning a massive ovation from Congress.

Dowdell was overwhelmed. "I'm thinking, it's an honor, but what's a fireman like me doing sitting here?" he told the Daily News.

But that wasn't even the best part of his day. Dowdell's brother, Army Capt. Patrick Dowdell, of the first West Point class after 9/11, returned from Afghanistan on Wednesday.

James rushed from Congress to catch a plane to Fort Collins, Colo.

"To be doing that and then leave to get on a flight to see my brother - it's just a good day all around," Dowdell said.

Rep. Joe Crowley (D-Queens/Bronx) spoke at Kevin Dowdell's funeral. For him, the tale of the helmet showed how much 9/11 mattered to the world.

"That helmet obviously was held as close as you can get to a religious article," he said.

Best of all for James will be having his brother home a decade after the terror attacks. "We're looking especially to the 10-year anniversary," Dowdell said. "We haven't been together on 9/11 in years, and we'll have him around the whole summer.

"It's gonna be good."

mmcauliff@nydailynews.com

Sunday, March 6, 2011

9/11 Memorial: Mariposa meets Manhattan in remembrance


MARIPOSA -- A group of four New York City firefighters visited Yosemite National Park shortly after Sept. 11, 2001, and ended up forging a lasting bond with some Mariposa County firefighters.

The New Yorkers somehow got lost, wound up in Mariposa instead of the park and were found by Mariposa's deputy fire chief, Art Laursen. He escorted the men to the Mariposa headquarters and introduced them to Deputy Chief Dan Michael and Fire Chief Blaine Shultz.

Comrades from opposite sides of a nation in grief became instant friends.

Long story short, the FDNY firefighters were given complimentary hotel rooms at the park, accommodating an extended visit, and the Mariposa firefighters were treated to VIP seats in Madison Square Garden the next year at the first anniversary ceremony of 9/11.

Naturally, when the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey recently announced its decision to allow pieces of the World Trade Center's twin towers to be given to communities, law enforcement agencies, fire departments and nonprofit groups as artifacts of 9/11, Jim Wilson, now the fire chief of Mariposa County, immediately sent his request.

On Feb. 17, four 116-pound boxes arrived at Wilson's office.



Read more: http://www.mercedsunstar.com/2011/03/05/1797870/911-memorial-mariposa-meets-manhattan.html#ixzz1FqVUVMB1


Read more: http://www.mercedsunstar.com/2011/03/05/1797870/911-memorial-mariposa-meets-manhattan.html#ixzz1FqVO9DYu

Thursday, March 3, 2011

9/11 firefighter dies of cancer linked to toxic dust


New York (CNN) -- Firefighter Randy Wiebicke who, like so many New York City firefighters, toiled in and around ground zero in the months after 9/11, died Wednesday following a nearly three-year battle with multiple myeloma, an aggressive and fatal blood cancer.

Wiebicke underwent an experimental stem cell transplant procedure last summer, when his cancer was in remission. But just two months after the transplant, he developed viral infections that, ultimately, his weakening body could no longer fight.

Wiebicke's wife, Madeline, said Randy was "a man who lived his life in the spirit of what being a firefighter meant to him. When others were in danger, running out of a burning building, he was there to run in," she wrote in an e-mail. "He lived his life beautifully, in a way that inspired everyone around him. Having Randy around not only made you want to be a better person, but it showed you how to get there," she wrote.

Hundreds of firefighters and other ground zero workers have died of cancer in the years following the attack on the World Trade Center, according to New York state health officials. So far, however, doctors have been reluctant to link those cancers to 9/11, saying that most cancers take longer than nine years to develop.

But a 2009 study published in the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine suggested a link between the type of cancer Wiebicke had and exposure to the toxic dust at ground zero. "We found a predominance of multiple myeloma in younger folks than we would have expected," said Dr. Jacqueline Moline, the study's author.

Moline is the former director of the World Trade Center Medical Monitoring and Treatment Program at Mount Sinai Hospital. She said doctors monitoring the health of first responders are paying close attention to blood cancers, since they usually develop in a shorter time frame than other cancers.


http://www.cnn.com/2011/HEALTH/03/02/new.york.firefighter/




Wednesday, March 2, 2011

World Trade Center steel for new 9/11 memorial in Acton


The Acton 9/11 Memorial Committee is on track to unveil a new monument in front of the Public Safety Facility marking the 10-year anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks. The monument will use structural steel from the World Trade Center towers, donated by the Port Authority of New York and New Jerseyexclusively for use in monuments.

According to Jon Stackhouse of the Acton Police Department, the committee will pick up its 10-foot piece of steel March 10.

“We’re really excited that we have a date to pick up our steel,” he said.

Two Acton residents were killed in the 9/11 attacks: Philip Rosenzweig and Amy Sweeney, who were both on American Airlines Flight 11. A memorial already exists in Acton Center, but the new monument is intended to honor those killed as well as public safety personnel.

The 9/11 Memorial Committee, as well as Sweeney’s husband, Mike Sweeney, will travel to New York City to pick up the steel and visit the World Trade Center tribute site.

The committee, made of Acton firefighters and police officers, originally estimated the cost of the memorial at $20,000. But as the committee raised money during the past year, new estimates place the cost at $25,000, leaving the committee $3,000 short of its goal. Stackhouse said the money was raised through events, including a popular comedy show and sales of engraved bricks through the buy-a-brick program, which is still running.

Stackhouse said the committee hoped to have a small ceremony March 10 when the truck returns to Acton to unveil the steel. Details of the timing are not yet available.

Read more: Officials confirm World Trade Center steel for new 9/11 memorial in Acton - Acton, MA - The Beacon http://www.wickedlocal.com/acton/archive/x1596407899/Officials-confirm-World-Trade-Center-steel-for-new-9-11-memorial-in-Acton#ixzz1FULuTkgz

9/11 Memorial to be Built at DOVER AFB


DOVER, Del.- Thousands of Americans lost their lives as a result of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The attacks sent shockwaves across the country and around the world. Now, firefighters at the Dover Air Force Base want to honor those who perished that day with a new memorial.

Plans call for the new memorial to be built outside the Air Force Base Fire Department. The Eagle Firefighters Association, which is not affiliated with the Air Force, said it will use two large pieces of steel from the World Trade Center as part of the memorial.

Blueprints call for pentagon shaped granite to be used in the memorial. The fire department also hopes to include dirt from the site where United Airlines Flight 93 crashed in Pennsylvania.

Fire Capt. Aaron Weisenberger said, "For emergency responders, that day will always play an important role. But, especially with this memorial, it's designed to commemorate everybody- not just emergency responders- but the civilians and the military who still sacrifice every day right now."

Firefighters are hoping to raise about $20,000 to pay for project. Firefighters hope to unveil the memorial on Sept. 11 of this year.

Donations to the project can be sent to: The Eagle Firefighters Association, P.O. Box 2107 Dover AFB, DE 19902. You may also purchase personalized bricks that will be used in the memorial by calling (302) 677-4420.