Albuquerque Journal

9/11 memorial to include names of ill responders

Rescuers, volunteers were exposed to toxins at WTC

- BY FRANK ELTMAN

POINT LOOKOUT, N.Y. — A Long Island beach where people gathered and watched in horror as the distant World Trade Center towers collapsed on Sept. 11, 2001, is the site of the latest memorial to victims of the terror attacks and among a growing number that honor people who died of illnesses years after participat­ing in the rescue and recovery effort.

The monument, built by the town of Hempstead near the Atlantic Ocean on Long Island’s south shore, features a twisted, 30-foot-tall beam of Trade Center steel, an elevated walkway and granite plaques engraved with the names of the nearly 3,000 people who died in the attacks.

A separate plaque will have the names of 582 police officers, firefighte­rs, constructi­on workers, cleanup volunteers and others who spent time in the rubble of the World Trade Center in the days or months after the attacks and, years later, died of a variety of causes that they, their families or their doctors suspected were linked to toxic ash and smoke at the site. There will be room to add more names.

Hempstead will officially dedicate its $1.3million memorial at a service today, the 16th anniversar­y of the attacks.

It joins a short but growing list of similar memorials recognizin­g people who fell ill after participat­ing in the rescue and recovery operation.

In May, officials at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum announced plans to set aside a commemorat­ive space at the World Trade Center to honor rescue and recovery workers.

New York’s police and fire department­s also have memorials for personnel who have died of illnesses since Sept. 11. A 9/11 memorial in Staten Island recently added a plaque with the names of residents there who have died of illnesses.

Researcher­s continue to study the longterm health impact on people exposed to sooty air at the Trade Center site.

Determinin­g how many people had serious illnesses directly linked to that exposure is a challenge, especially because many of the people involved are now of an age at which health problems, like cancer, are quite common.

Roughly 30,000 people have applied to the government compensati­on fund for people with illnesses they think might be related to 9/11. Officials overseeing the fund still are reviewing those claims but have so far awarded $3 billion. About 2,700 of the 17,400 people whose claims have been approved have cancer.

Through the end of August, 144 of the approved claims involved someone who died of an illness that made them eligible for compensati­on.

That doesn’t mean the government has concluded that their illness was definitely caused by toxins unleashed on 9/11. The program was designed to cover anyone who could show they were exposed to World Trade Center smoke, dust and ash and was subsequent­ly diagnosed with an illness that, at least theoretica­lly, might be caused by some of the chemicals present at the site.

In addition to the steel beam, planted like a flag, and the plaques with names, the memorial park includes a table inscribed with the Walt Whitman poem “On the Beach at Night.”

The east side of the park features a pear tree grown from a seedling from the socalled “Survivor Tree” that lived through the destructio­n at ground zero.

Another plaque will point in the direction of the rebuilt World Trade Center, visible 24 miles in the distance.

“Having it on the beach at Point Lookout, the same place where hundreds of people assembled in the wake of the terrorist attacks, makes it uniquely compelling,” town supervisor Anthony Santino said.

 ?? FRANK ELTMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A piece of steel from the destroyed World Trade Center stands at a memorial that will be dedicated today on the 16th anniversar­y of the attacks, in Point Lookout, N.Y.
FRANK ELTMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS A piece of steel from the destroyed World Trade Center stands at a memorial that will be dedicated today on the 16th anniversar­y of the attacks, in Point Lookout, N.Y.

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