New York Daily News

HERO DIES OF WTC ILLNESS

Cop suffered, but fought for 9/11 funding

- BY THOMAS TRACY AND LARRY MCSHANE

A heroic NYPD detective, more than two decades after 9/11, paid the ultimate price for her work amid the toxic ruins of the World Trade Center.

Barbara Burnette, 58, of Queens, died Dec. 30 after a long and debilitati­ng battle with health issues linked to her 23 daunting days in the burning Ground Zero rubble following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attack that toppled the twin towers.

The former college basketball player developed lung cancer that forced her NYPD retirement in 2006 and wound up in a wheelchair during her courageous post-9/11 fight for life. She was diagnosed a year earlier with abnormal tissue in her lungs, and eventually left homebound by her deteriorat­ing health.

Yet Burnette, who also suffered from hypertensi­on and PTSD related to her time in lower

Manhattan, later became an ardent health care advocate for 9/11 first responders.

“I will never forget Barbara,” said Detectives’ Endowment Associatio­n President Paul DiGiacomo. “And I won’t forget the work and sacrifice she made on that day and throughout a career cut short by the attack on this country.”

The veteran cop was working in Brooklyn’s 73rd Precinct gang unit on 9/11, and traveled with several fellow officers by boat from Sunset Park to the downtown Manhattan site — arriving just as the 110-story buildings toppled.

Burnette spent the next 12 hours working in the toxic air while helping evacuate a pregnant woman and several other people via their boat from the site back to Brooklyn.

She recalled returning to Ground Zero only hours later on Sept. 12 and then for weeks after, with Burnette recounting how she was constantly spitting the toxic soot from her mouth and throat while working without a protective mask.

“I had to constantly get my eyes washed out,” she told the Daily News in 2015. “I was doing a lot of coughing, a lot of spitting up. I didn’t think about it because I wanted to help others.”

Burnette became an advocate for federal aid to the first responders stricken with an assortment of medical issues after the attack. She visited Washington in 2015, traveling between congressio­nal offices in her wheelchair, to help convince the politician­s to extend 9/11-related health care coverage with the Zadroga Act.

Her last public appearance came just before the 20th anniversar­y of the terrorist attacks this past September, with Burnette wearing an oxygen mask in her wheelchair.

She is survived by her husband and fellow NYPD member Lee, along with their three children and five grandkids. An online posting announced a Friday wake followed by a Saturday funeral, both at St. John the Evangelist Lutheran Church in Brooklyn.

 ?? ?? Barbara Burnette, a former NYPD detective and 9/11 first responder, testified in Washington to get funding to care for the those with terrorrela­ted ailments.
Barbara Burnette, a former NYPD detective and 9/11 first responder, testified in Washington to get funding to care for the those with terrorrela­ted ailments.

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