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View Full Version : Ceremony closes 'Ground Zero' cleanup



supermanpal
05-30-2002, 12:31 PM
NEW YORK (CNN) -- Eight months and 19 days after the twin towers of New York's World Trade Center were brought down by hijacked airliners, the cleanup and recovery efforts at Ground Zero officially ended Thursday with a brief and somber ceremony.
http://i.cnn.net/cnn/2002/US/05/30/rec.wtc.cleanup/story.flag.walk.jpg

http://images.chron.com/content/news/photos/02/05/30/ceremony2.jpg

An American flag was carried from Ground Zero on a stretcher, symbolizing the victims of September 11 who were never found.



There were no speeches. The ceremony began with the sound of a fire bell ringing for a fallen firefighter at 10:29 a.m. ET -- the same time the trade center's north tower collapsed on September 11.

Thousands of people stood in silence, some with tears streaming from their eyes, as an honor guard made up of police, firefighters and representatives of other agencies walked slowly up a ramp from the site carrying a stretcher bearing only an American flag.

"It's over, but it will never be forgotten," said FDNY Battalion Commander Richard Picciotto, who was in the north tower when it was hit.

The flag, symbolizing the victims who were killed on September 11 but never found, was placed into a waiting ambulance.

By the numbers:
The World Trade Center attack
2,823 people killed
1,102 victims identified
1.8 million tons of debris removed
(108,342 truckloads)
3.1 million hours of labor spent on cleanup




It was followed by a flatbed truck carrying the last 50-ton steel column from the site of the Trade Center ruins. The beam -- part of the southeast corner of the south tower -- was hoisted onto a flatbed truck and shrouded in black cloth after its removal Tuesday night.

Ten minutes into the ceremony, a pair of buglers -- one from New York's Police Department, the other from the New York Fire Department -- played "Taps," followed by a flyover of NYPD helicopters.

Authorities put the final death toll from the twin towers' destruction at 2,823. The remains of 1,102 victims have been identified. Only 289 intact bodies were recovered.

The ceremony marked the end of cleanup efforts after eight months and 108,342 truckloads of debris. The cleanup was originally estimated to last a year.

"This is amazing to see how this place has cleaned up and operating again," said Allen Sistrunk, who works in the financial district.

A chance to say goodbye
The ceremony gave families such as Anna and Roman Gertsberg a chance to say goodbye to their daughter, Marina, whose body has never been found. She was 25, the Gertsbergs' only child, and had started work at the bond trading firm Cantor Fitzgerald only a week before.

"I'm going to be closer to Marina," Anna Gertsberg said before the ceremony. "So it's like going to the cemetery, and of course it's going to be a lot of people ... who have what we have."

Roman Gertsberg said he calls the medical examiner's office frequently in hopes that his daughter's remains have been identified.

"They have lots of parts which still have to be DNAed, and I still hope they will find something, because it hurts," he said.

Among the dead were 343 New York firefighters and an estimated 70 police officers from various departments, including 37 from New York's Port Authority and 23 from the New York Police Department.

Hundreds of workers labored around the clock since September 11 to reclaim the bodies of those who died in the attack and to remove the 1.6 million tons of steel and concrete left behind. The debris was moved to a Staten Island landfill.

Many of those who worked on the cleanup were volunteers. Lee Ielppi joined the search in hopes of finding his 29-year-old son, Jonathan, a firefighter lost in the disaster. Ielppi continued the work long after losing hope that his son remained alive.

"I helped out in a lot of situations where people were found. ... We didn't find them alive, but we found them," he said.

"And when we found somebody, that made it easy for somebody out there. But I said, 'I'm staying here until I find my son.'"

Jonathan Ielppi's body was discovered on December 11, one of 289 found intact.

Reminders of the attack remain nearly everywhere around the area.

In addition to the 16-acre World Trade Center site itself, light poles still bear banners urging New Yorkers to "Salute our heroes."

The fence surrounding St. Paul's Chapel, just a block from the site, has been turned into a makeshift shrine where visitors have left flags, T-shirts, teddy bears and other mementos.

Another 189 people were killed in Washington on September 11 when a third hijacked jet crashed into the Pentagon, and 44 more died aboard a fourth jet that crashed into a Pennsylvania field after passengers apparently tried to overpower another team of hijackers.

-- CNN Correspondent Michael Okwu contributed to this report.

Dark Spider
05-30-2002, 12:36 PM
God Bless Everyone, especially the families of the victims never recovered, and the firefighters who risked their lives to save and cleanup a nation wide disaster...

But there is one question that still remains...what's gonna happen to ground zero now? I think a memorial is in order here...since I don't think the world really needs another Trade Center so quickly...

Joe Wagner
05-30-2002, 01:08 PM
I think the ceremony was a much needed closer to the clean up of the WTC. It's hard to believe that it only took 8 months to remove the damage of a terrible memory that will always remain ingrained in my mind. My prayers go out to everyone that was lost - ranging from the workers that were getting ready to start yet another day of work, the police and firemen that ran back into the building to save anyone they could and the people trapped in the planes.

In regards to what will happen now - the rights to the land has now officially reverted back to their owner and there are six presentations that should be submitted within the next couple of weeks. The final decision will be made sometime in December and let everyone know what will happen to the land. Personally I think a memorial should be created but at the same time I believe a new building should also be created with the memorial inside of it - a living memorial if you will and also a sign that we will never forget and never surrender to the cowardly acts that were brought against us on September 11th.

-Joe!

DisneyBoy
05-30-2002, 01:57 PM
....

It's hard to find the words when reading things like that. When I heard about the attacks, I really had a mix of feelings. Surprise, disbelief, disappointment, anger, sadness. Thankfully no one in my immediate life was touched directly by this tragedy, but the after effects will live on.

I want to extend a hug to all those who need them. No reason necessary. This has touched us all....but for those who have to wake up everyday...never knowing why they'll never again see that person who was special to them...I truely extend my heartfelt sympathy. Still can't believe it.

Thanks for posting that. Sometimes you need to remember.

James Harvey
05-30-2002, 03:07 PM
Ex-Mayor Rudolph Guiliani (sp) said that a library and memorial should be established to remind the city and the word of the tragedy and heroic deeds that took place on that day and the following weeks. An official decision is a long way off from being made.

Auggie Doggie
05-30-2002, 03:55 PM
ALL DONE! Now we got one thing down.

Next on the agenda...

[list=1]
Think of a new structure to put over that vacent lot.
Hire men to stay on High Alert at all of the world's monuments.
Most important of all: KILL ALL TERRORISTS WHO TRY TO UNLEASH HELL IN THE US OR ANYWHERE!!!!!!!!!!
[/list=1]

Cowgirl1855
05-30-2002, 04:19 PM
This whole mess is so sad. I think about the families of the people killed all of the time. I feel so bad for them...

I went to Ground Zero not even 3 weeks ago this May on a school trip. When we got there, they had stopped looking for bodies. I took pictures of Ground Zero, and it looks like a construction site now. There are memorials all over the place, and a huge wall where all sorts of people wrote on it. There wasn't any space leftover at all. Along the road is a whole lot of flowers, (people replace the flowers when they die) pictures, cards, flags (from all different countries), and big posters made my elementary school kids. The place very sad and quiet. I hope they make a permanent memorial out of the site.

Mattashell
05-30-2002, 10:41 PM
The reason why I beleive an exact duplicate should be constructed in it's place is that anything else is an admition of defeat in the eyes of our enemies. They think they have one, and as far as the war effort looks, we've let them get away with it so far. The enemies of the U.S. are bullies. A new World Trade Center would defy them. Unfortunately I have no illusion that this is very unlikely to happen.


I should ad that having grown up in New York, that building holds many personal memories for me, it would be gowing of topic, but let us start a thread to discuss our memories of old New York.

I went to the top with my father as a small child. He had a clear plastic cube with family pictures on his desk at work with me and my sister standing together in the highest point in New York.

We ate at Windows on The World when I was very young when my grandparents came to visit. My Grandfather is now long gone.

I had the biggest crush on this girl I knew all through high school. I actually had one date with her the summer after grduation (1994). We saw a free cocert by The Mammas and The Pappas (we joked that it was really only the Papas) in the courtyard at the bottom of the towers. Afterward we wanted to go to the top, but when we found out you had to pay we took the free elevators to the highest floor they would go, and found a fire exit door that was ajar. We snuck into the stairwell and started going up until we came to our senses and realised we wouldn't be able to go back into the building without setting off the alarm (and who wants to climb all those stairs) we left the way we got in. I also saw Toad The Wet Sprocket there on a previous ocasion with my sister and her freinds.

From the music room on the top floor of my highschool (Sewanhaka H. S., Floral Park, Long Island) where I attended school band rehersals, one could see the very tips of the towers over the trees. It was the only part of the Manhattan skyline that could be seen from that far.

Channel 11 (WB syndicate) used the towers as their logo (they resemble an 11.) Just about every news program had the towers, a symbol of New York, as part of they're graphics. You'll also see them everywhere from the opening credits of News Radio to the background of it seems like every other shot on Gargoyles.

And of course every time I went to Manhattan I saw the towers all the time. Those who don't know may not comprehend their massive scale. Their pressence was felt anywhere downtown.

Though I did not loose any loved ones, I lost a peice of my life. I had a very close friend who was testing to enter th FDNY when I left New York in late 1998. I had lost touch with him and very worried for days before I found out he was okay, but my fears were justified, because I also found out he was a cop. But so what? My friend is alive and well but thousands of other people's freinds, family members, and lovers are gone in a second. Why should I feel any relief in that?

I loved New York, and I really don't like the place I am now (Seattle, WA) I miss that place much, and have been wanting to go back since long before 9-11, but I fear it isn't there anymore. Aside from the massive geographical change (and believe me it is one), New York had a culture like no other city in the world. Take a look at the numders posted at the top of this thread and tell me if you beleave NYC's attitude could survive all that. I don't though I hope it did.

Feslmogh
05-31-2002, 12:57 PM
I would never forget my trip to NYC and visited the WTC...
I have a small page as a tribute that I would like you all to visit and contribute...
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Images_of_WTC/