Taken
from: New
York Newsday
A Passion
to Rebuild
City releases ambitious
proposal for disaster site.
by Bobby Cuza, Melanie
Lefkowitz, Curtis L. Taylor, Ken Fireman, Katia Hetter,
Jordan Rau and Nick Chiles
September 19, 2001
City officials released an ambitious proposal for rebuilding
lower Manhattan yesterday as the city acknowledged the
one-week anniversary of the World Trade Center attack
- and the slim chance of finding more survivors.
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and City Council
Speaker Peter Vallone released a six-page plan to establish
an unprecedented commission with "broad and sweeping
powers" to pool the city's vast resources and rebuild
the area in and around the World Trade Center. The mighty
commission, which would be made up of seven members all
appointed by the mayor to five-year terms, would also
help businesses that were rocked by last week's disaster.
The passion to help the city move past the
tragedy was also evidenced both in Washington and in Albany.
President George W. Bush issued an order increasing the
federal funds available to pay for cleanup of the collapsed
buildings in lower Manhattan. Originally, the federal
government had planned to pay for 75 percent of the costs;
it will now pay for all of it. The president also signed
a bill providing $40 billion that would help New York
City recover.
In Albany, state lawmakers proposed various
efforts to provide help, including free college expenses
in the State and City University of New York systems to
the children of victims and designating lower Manhattan
an empire zone, which would relieve some businesses of
nearly all tax levies. Attending SUNY could be worth $47,500
over four years.
After viewing the disaster site with United
Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, Giuliani said any
rebuilding effort should include a memorial "for
the massive numbers of people who were lost.
"There should be a memorial here to
the spirit of the Americans that rebuilt it," the
mayor said. "And then we should think of what kind
of economic development should take place."
Annan said he wanted officials from other
nations to see the carnage firsthand as a nudge for them
to join the fight against terrorism. "We are all
shocked, but to see it close up gives you a completely
different dimension," Annan said. "I think we're
going to have several of them come to see it."
Annan also said the UN's General Assembly
meeting, scheduled for Sept. 25-Oct. 4, has been postponed.
The mayor said he also believed it was crucial
for officials to view the site firsthand, and to that
end he took several members of Congress to the site, including
Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii), Sen. James Jeffords (I-Vt.),
Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), Sen. Bob Smith (R-N.H.).
In Washington, the harsh talk was turned
up another notch as Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
suggested that the United States could consider overthrowing
governments that refused to stop their coddling of terrorists.
As for rebuilding New York, the proposal
to establish a special commission was met with some suspicion
in certain quarters of the city, primarily because of
the involvement of Vallone, a Democratic mayoral candidate.
The legislation is scheduled to be introduced Friday at
an emergency state-of-the-city council meeting called
by Vallone.
A campaign aide for Public Advocate Mark
Green called the proposal "ambiguous" and said
it was an attempt by Vallone to politicize the rebuilding
process just days before the mayoral primary. Eric Lane,
former executive director and counsel to the 1989 Charter
Revision Commission, said there's nothing illegal about
city officials changing the charter, but he said "a
host of policy issues" would arise by allowing the
mayor to make all of the five-year appointments.
Vallone has denied he is seeking political
gain in the aftermath of the tragedy. Vallone spokesman
Jordan Barowitz said the legislation was still on the
drawing board and being drafted to withstand any possible
legal challenges.
"This design is in the infant stages,
but given the extraordinary circumstances, the commission
needs broad and sweeping powers," Barowitz said.
As bewilderment begins to fade, city residents
are starting to realize that the inconveniences that come
with increased security, traffic and paranoia might be
around for a while. According to the estimates of one
city official, the cleanup will take a year. That is based
on calculations in which workers continue to clear out
15,000 tons of rubble a day.
As rescue workers made their first foray
into the vast shopping mall underneath the ruins, they
reported that although it was dark and deserted, it had
mostly remained structurally intact.
At the Torneau store, amid eight clocks
on the wall showing times from around the world, the New
York clock had stopped at 9:10 a.m., the time the attack
commenced. Apparently, some people had other things on
their minds as they fled the scene: There were windows
smashed, revealing empty Rolex cases.
At ground level, search-and-rescuers are
using high-tech cameras attached to the ends of fiber-optic
cables along with miniature lights to see what is beneath
the rubble.
On Church Street, there were some patriotic
messages scrawled into the dust on the side of some buildings,
like "God Bless America" and "RIP."
But there were also some uglier messages. One said, "Kill
them all, let Allah sort them out."
As for finding survivors, the statements
of workers and officials around the site are becoming
increasingly hopeless.
One Fire Department captain near Ground
Zero conceded that "FEMA is pretty much taking over.
They're moving in the cranes. It will be a miracle if
they find anyone."
Another firefighter said: "At some
point, you've got to move in the heavy machinery. We're
not going to sacrifice more guys at this point. You can't.
But it's hard. Guys don't want to give that up."
Even Giuliani sounded as pessimistic about
the hope for survivors as he has since this all began
last week.
"The chances of recovering any live
human beings are very, very small given the amount of
time and the condition of the site," he said.
"We will still conduct ourselves as
a rescue effort, as well as a recovery effort. But we
don't have any substantial amount of hope that we can
offer to anyone that we're going to be able to find anyone
alive."
Last night, nearly seven hundred family
members of missing firefighters met with Giuliani, Gov.
George Pataki, grief counselors and members of the Fire
Department brass at the New York Hilton in midtown.
The fire chiefs showed slides of the search-and-rescue
mission and explained where they were digging, said a
fire official who asked that his name not be used.
"It was a very moving meeting where
many of the loved ones of these firefighters had a chance
to listen to the chiefs describe what was going on,"
the official said. "They applauded the governor and
gave a standing ovation to the mayor. The mayor was very
comforting to them."
An interdenominational coalition of clergy
called the Ground Zero Clergy Task Force, which has formed
around the World Trade Center disaster, announced it has
started to collect information on volunteers who might
be available to help the cleanup effort in the future
when volunteers aren't as easy to come by.
Those interested in registering should go
to www.operationhope.ag.org. The task force, made up of
from 50 to 75 houses of worship from across the city,
has also set up a short-term relief fund to help families
with such immediate financial needs as funeral costs and
relocation, said Jeremy Del Rio, son of the Rev. Richard
Del Rio of Abounding Grace Ministries in the East Village
who founded the task force.
The scope of the disaster became clear yesterday
to the employees of Windows on the World restaurant, formerly
atop Tower One of the World Trade Center, who gathered
in midtown to get information from their union about benefits
available to them. Of the 350 workers, about 75 are missing.
Many of the workers were foreign-born, and the discussions
were translated into Cantonese, Spanish and French.
The Toll
WORLD TRADE CENTER
218 Confirmed dead
5,422 Missing, including
343 FDNY
23 NYPD
37 Uniformed Port
Authority employees
157 Airline passengers and crew
189 Believed dead including:
PENTAGON
64 Airline passengers and crew
PENNSYLVANIA
44 Airline passengers and crew confirmed dead
|