Archive of News
Please help me go on living
A man’s life is at stake. His name is Vito Valenti. On Sept. 11 he was caught in the maelstrom and stayed at Ground Zero as a volunteer to help in the frantic rescue and recovery operation. And today he is dying.
Save lives with $150 lung exam
WHAT HAPPENED to Mark DeBlase — the sudden emergence of a rapidly fatal lung disease — is the nightmare that shadows the forgotten victims of 9/11.
I never complained, or sued, nor will I, but in case I die…
They were among the 40,000 who stepped forward for New York and America after 9/11, and they speak here of the price they paid for serving. Their stories are not unusual. No, they are typical among the more than 12,000 men and women who were sickened by breathing the toxic cloud that shrouded Ground Zero.
The making of a health disaster
FOR CHRISTOPHER HYNES, life as a forgotten victim of 9/11 is a battle for breath. Five years ago, Hynes was a 30-year-old, healthy, nonsmoking New York City police officer. Then, in September and October 2001, he was assigned to Ground Zero duty, spending more than 100 hours patrolling the perimeter of the smoldering rubble of the twin towers. The air was thick with dust and smoky particles.
Death Sentence
On Aug. 6, 2004, Stephen Johnson died from service in the line of duty at age 47. Yet the rolls of honor do not bear his name, nor has the mayor or the fire commissioner stood in public tribute to this fallen hero.
Abandoned Heroes
Forty-thousand-strong, they labored at Ground Zero under miserable conditions in a time of crisis, working 10 and 12 hours a day to search for the lost, extinguish underground fires and haul off 2 million tons of rubble. As a direct result, well over 12,000 are sick today, having suffered lasting damage to their respiratory systems.
Health troubles persist for 9/11 rescue workers
It was late in the night when James Zadroga, sleeping beside his 4-year-old daughter, woke up to fetch her some milk. It was no easy errand: The former New York City police detective’s lungs were so scarred that he needed supplemental oxygen to breathe.
Manhattan: Search for Body Parts Will Resume
The federal Environmental Protection Agency has approved a revised plan by the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation to inspect the rooftop of the former Deutsche Bank building, which was struck by the collapsing 2 World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. Hundreds of tiny bone fragments have been found in the gravel ballast, which is being cleaned before demolition of the bank building begins.
Health of 9/11 Responders Is to Be Surveyed Again
In the largest effort yet to understand the physical and mental health effects of the Sept. 11 attack, city health officials yesterday introduced a plan to resurvey more than 70,000 people who first reported their symptoms to the World Trade Center Health Registry two years ago.
Survey Finds That Grief Is a Constant Companion for Those at the Scene of the 9/11 Attacks
A survey being released today by the American Red Cross shows that for many of those directly affected by the Sept. 11 attacks, grief remains a constant companion nearly five years later.