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Alex Philippidis Remembers 9/11: HELPING THE HEROES THE LEGACY

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WPCNR NEWS AND COMMENT. From Alex Philippidis of Genome Web Daily News, Mary Ann Leibert, Inc.  September 11, 2016:

Editor’s Note:

Alex, well-known local reporter around Westchester County for the last 38 years sent along his remembrance of what happened after the Twin Towers fell this day, 23 years ago today: 

Two weeks after 9/11, I wrote this article sharing this story of something good that came from something evil… No link to this story exists any more, so I copy it in its entirety below:

Helping the heroes

From: Westchester County Business Journal, Oct. 1, 2001

“The World Trade Center should, because of its importance, become a living representation of man’s belief in humanity, his need for individual dignity, his belief in the cooperation of men, and through this cooperation, his ability to find greatness.” – Minoru Yamasaki, architect of the Twin Towers

Nearly three weeks have passed, but the memories are as fresh as ever for Jay Martino and 50 of his colleagues about the hell they witnessed at Ground Zero of the terrorist attacks that leveled the World Trade Center.

“It’s an unimaginable site of destruction. You search your mind to come up with the right verbiage, the right adjectives. How can I describe what I saw? It’s a horrific scene,” said Martino, a general superintendent with Granite/Halmar Construction Co. of Mount Vernon.

Martino, head of the Masons & Concrete Contractors Association of Hudson Valley Inc., led a team of workers who answered their industry’s call to send volunteers and heavy machines to the tons of wreckage that comprised the Twin Towers and five smaller buildings.

Granite/Halmar was among dozens of construction contractors in and around Westchester that sent resources to the World Trade Center in response to a memo distributed to all 650 members of the Construction Industry Council (CIC) of Westchester and Hudson Valley Inc. of Tarrytown.

Yonkers Contracting Co., which helped build the World Trade Center in the 1970s, donated 100 trucks to the rescue effort, while Tilcon New York Inc. of West Nyack and four subcontractors donated equipment and personnel from their 21 quarry and asphalt facilities in New York and New Jersey.

“I think more than any other industry, construction contractors and workers comprehend the enormity of the task at hand because we understand the magnitude of what it takes to create such magnificent structures and buildings,” said Ross J. Pepe, CIC president.

“Everyone in our industry has a deep and new-found appreciation of the ironworkers, operating engineers, laborers, Teamsters and other union workers now at the site as the world watches these guys on TV doing a job that nobody would ever want to do.”

The World Trade Center took half a decade to build, but only two hours for terrorists to level in the series of attacks that shook the world on Sept. 11.

County construction industry responds
The following day when CIC asked for volunteers, hundreds answered the call. Fifty of them came from Granite/Halmar, which had hired them for its many projects under construction – such as the new international arrivals terminal and an expansion of the British Airways terminal at John F. Kennedy International Airport.

“They said they needed cutoff saws, tools, oxygen tanks, manpower. So I put the call out to all of our foreman asking if any of them would volunteer,” Martino recalled “We loaded a half-dozen pickup trucks with oxygen and acetylene gas tanks, plus dust masks, goggles, safety glasses.”

The Granite/Halmar men joined other CIC member companies in assembling at Yonkers Raceway, then following a state police escort south to lower Manhattan. Authorities have divided the area in and around the World Trade Center into four zones, each overseen by a construction contractor: AMEC p.l.c.; Tully Construction Inc.; a joint venture of Turner Construction and Plaza Materials Inc.; and Bovis Lend Lease and two subcontractors, Grace Industries Inc. and Gateway.

Granite/Halmar entered the site working for AMEC, which controls the northwest zone of the recovery area, Granite/Halmar had worked for AMEC at the Kennedy airport projects.

“We hooked up with a firefighter, a captain. He escorted us to ground zero. Right away we went to work with the firemen. They were elated to see us. They had nothing. They had no cutoff saws we could see. They had one set of torches. They were working their way through the pile of rubble with picks and shovels. Everything was done by hand,” Martino said.

“We were cutting steel into pieces. We took everything we could handle and loaded it into 5-gallon barrels, then kept passing them on down the line,” Martino said. “We worked till late in the evening, 11 or 12 o’clock at night.

“It was just amazing, the amount of debris and structural steel there was around. You stood on steel beams that had just collapsed. You’d look at the steel and it was completely clean.

There was no concrete to be found. You didn’t see any chunks of concrete. The fire was so great the concrete had disintegrated.
“You’d see bits and pieces of carpet, and every once in a while, there would be a bumper to a vehicle. You stood on the steel beams which had collapsed,” Martino said.

Not once during their time at Ground Zero did Martino or his men spot any bodies, or any parts of bodies.

“I was not looking forward to anything like that. I was looking to help and I would have gone anywhere I was told to go. But I kept wondering. What would I do if I saw something? How would I react?”

An especially welcome sight, Martino said, was the hundreds of volunteers who catered to weary rescuers: “Every time you turned around, you heard. Do you need something to drink? Do you want something to eat? They had buckets of water and Gatorade. They had Power Bars.”

Just three years ago Martino and workers from GraniteHalmar’s predecessor, Halmar Builders of New York Inc., transformed the drab exterior public space outside the World Trade Center into World Trade Center Plaza, a public plaza complete with granite pavement and landscaped areas.

Looking at a poster-sized photo of the plaza outside his office, Martino paused. “I feel funny seeing the pictures of it now.”

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SEPTEMBER 10—LEGISLATOR BENJAMIN BOYKIN APPOINTED PRESIDENT OF NEW YORK ASSOCIATION OF COUNTIES

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en Español

Dear Friends and Neighbors,

I am excited to share with you, today, the New York State Association of Counties (NYSAC) has appointed me as its new President for the 2024-2025 year term.

NYSAC serves as the united voice of our counties, committed to educate, advocate, represent and serve our constituents. It also plays a vital role in identifying and addressing issues that impact our counties.

Click here to view my acceptance speech.

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SEPT 11– WHITE PLAINS 9-11 Remembrance Ceremony 8:30 A.M.

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Please join us for the CWP annual September 11 Remembrance Ceremony

Sept 11 Monument dedicated to WP residents

 

The ceremony will include a message from Mayor Roach, a wreath laying and placement of flower bouquets by members of the White Plains Common Council, and a moment of silence to reflect on this day.

Residents are invited to join us for this special ceremony.

Please call the Department of Recreation and Parks at 914.422.1336 if you have questions regarding accessibility

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DOES EVERYONE REALLY NEED VACINATIONS?

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YOUR LOCAL EPIDEMIOLOGIST EXPLAINS THIS WEEK’S HEALTH ISSUES

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WHITE PLAINS WEEK–THE SEPT 6 REPORT–SEE IT MONDAY AT 7 ON FIOS CH 45, WPOPTIMUM CH 76

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THE WHITE PLAINS URBAN RENEWAL MOVE TO EMINENT DOMAIN PROPERTIES AGAIN ON EAST POST ROAD

A LOOK BACK AT THE LAST ATTEMPT BY THE CITY TO ACQUIRE PROPERTIES 8 YEARS AGO

 

THE NEW PROPOSAL

HEAD OF FREELANCERS UNION ON THE NEW LAW THAT GIVES FREELANCERS DIRECT ACCESS TO ATTORNEY GENERAL WHO WILL TELL CLIENTS WITHOLDING PAY TO PAY IN 30 DAYS AND DOUBLE THE PAYMENT SEE THE COMPLETE INTERVIEW AT WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG

EUGENE DEBS THE LABOR CRUSADER, TEDDY ROOSEVELT THE TRUST BUSTER AND GROVER CLEVELAND’S ROLE IN ESTABLISHING LABOR DAY AFTER THE PULLMAN STRIKE MASSACRE BY FEDERAL TROOPS

THE COVID SURGE IN THE MED-HUDSON REGION CASES DECLINE FOR THIRD STRAIT WEEK, HOSPITALIZATIONS GROWING, DISEASE NOT CAUSING AS MUCH ILLNESS. MORE CASES THAN A YEAR AGO IN AUGUST

 

LIBERTY PARK 9-11 REMEMBRANCE SEPTEMBER 11.

JOHN BAILEY AND THE NEWS

EVERY WEEK ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK

SINCE 2001 A.D. 24TH CONSECUTIVE YEAR

SEE THIS WEEK’S REPORT AT

www.wpcommunitymedia.org

COUNTY REMEMBRANCE 

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PEOPLE TO BE HEARD REPORT: THE FREELANCE IS NOT FREE LAW WHAT IT DOES SATURDAY AT 7 PM ON FIOS CH 45 AND WP OPTIMUM CH 76 AND RIGHT NOW ON WWW.WPCOMMUNITYMEDIA.ORG

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JOHN BAILEY INTERVIEWS RAFAEL ESPINAL OF THE FREELANCERS UNION ON

WHAT COMPANIES HAVE TO DO NOW.

HOW THEIR FINES DOUBLE IF THEY FAIL TO PAY A FREE LANCER WITHIN 30 DAYS

THE CONTRACTS THEY HAVE TO PUT INTO EFFECT.

THE THOUSANDS OF FREE LANCE ARTISTS, WRITERS, PHOTOGRAPHERS PREVIOUSLY VICTIMIZED BY UNSCRUPULOUS COMPANIES

THE IMPACT OF THE NEW LAW

TONIGHT AT 8

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HACHETTE VS INTERNET DECISION IMPACT: FIGHT FOR THE FUTURE LOSES APPEAL, COPYRIGHT UPHELDRESTRICTING RIGHT TO COPY BOOKS THEY OWN

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS LAW JOURNAL. From WikIpedia. September 5, 2024:

 

Hachette Book Group, Inc. v. Internet Archive, No. 20-cv-4160 (JGK), 2023 WL 2623787 (S.D.N.Y. 2023), is a case in which the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York determined that the Internet Archive, a registered library, committed copyright infringement by scanning and lending complete copies of books through controlled digital lending mechanisms.

Stemming from the creation of the National Emergency Library (NEL) during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, publishing companies Hachette Book GroupPenguin Random HouseHarperCollins, and Wiley alleged that the Internet Archive’s Open Library and National Emergency Library facilitated copyright infringement.

The case primarily concerns the fair use of controlled digital lending (CDL) of complete copies of certain books.

The case does not concern the display of short passages, limited page views, search results, books out of copyright or out of print, or books without an ebook version currently for sale.[1]

On March 25, 2023, the court ruled on the case.[2]

In August 2023, the parties reached a negotiated judgment, including a permanent injunction barring the Internet Archive from lending complete copies through CDL of some of the plaintiffs’ books.[3]

The Internet Archive appealed the decision but it was upheld by the appellate court in September 2024.

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THE GREENBURGH STUDENT NEWS NETWORK DEBUTS

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. From Paul Feiner, Greenburgh Town Supervisor. September 5, 2024:

 

ANNOUNCING A NEW MONTHLY NEWS PROGRAM PRODUCED BY STUDENTS

THE GREENBURGH STUDENT NEWS NETWORK

Blake Feinstein, a Junior at Edgemont High School, is starting the Greenburgh Student News Network (GSNN), a monthly show airing on Cablevision and online. He plans to build a team of high school student reporters, writers, editors, and film crew members from throughout Greenburgh. Students would also take on leadership roles of producer and director for each episode.

The student team will collaborate to plan topics for each episode. Filming will take place in studio (Greenburgh Town Hall) and on location. Students will be able to conduct interviews and report on local news, school, sports, and community activities. The show will embrace various student viewpoints, including controversies.

A SAMPLE OF THE KIND OF NEWS STORY THAT GREENBURGH STUDENT NEWS WILL REPORT ON

LAST WEEKENDS GREENBURGH DIAPER DASH (watch 2-minute video)

Blake recently reported on the Greenburgh Diaper Dash and produced this two minute video: https://youtu.be/GjwqFWXWG2s?si=GjfjGoDI5H5fUL7j

The TV show would include this kind of segment, as well as other features like longer interviews and student discussions.

“The student perspective is usually absent from local news, but students are an important part of the community with concerns and interests,” Blake explains. “I want to create an engaging show that serves the community by sharing student viewpoints, while giving opportunities for students to grow their film, reporting and writing skills.”

ARE YOU INTERESTED IN JOINING THE GREENBURGH STUDENT NEWS NETWORK TEAM?

If you are interested in joining the team or learning more, please email Blake at greenburghstudentnews@gmail.com. The first GSNN team meeting will take place in mid-September at Town Hall.

Paul Feiner

Greenburgh Town Supervisor

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Hachette vs. Internet Court Decision Threatens Freedom of Reading for All

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WPCNR THE LETTER TICKER. From Fight for the Future September 5, 2024:

 

Hey, in case you’re covering yesterday’s ruling in Hachette v Internet Archive, wanted to flag our statement and photos of recent actions in support of the internet archive and against surveilling readers.

Happy to chat more on this or connect you to librarians on these issues.

 

Statement + photos on ruling in Hachette v Internet Archive: this can’t stand

Photos and videos from recent author and activist actions in support of the Internet Archive can be found here, and press outlets are welcome to use them with attribution: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1Jae8vHU5dks9nXu1pPzt_p2qUNMBovfq?usp=sharing

The following statement can be attributed to Lia Holland (they/she), Campaigns and Communications Director for Fight for the Future, a queer women and artist led human rights organization:

“From saving the entirety of MTV News to archiving the digital record of each presidential administration, the nonprofit Internet Archive is providing invaluable service to humanity by offering everyone around the world equitable and surveillance-free access to preserved knowledge and history. While we’re still analyzing the ruling, we are profoundly disappointed that libraries, diverse authors, and the readers who love them have suffered such a myopic and dangerous blow from a federal court today. With more people than ever before opting to read digitally, the Internet Archive has been fighting a very important battle for the future of reading against some of the world’s most powerful corporations. Big Tech’s greed has infected Big Publishing, causing them to abandon the concept of ownership for digital books, and to force all libraries and readers to buy licenses that lock them into spyware-ridden apps that turn data on readers into a new product for publishing.

Make no mistake, this suit is about taking away the right to own popular book formats and the right to be safe reading them.

A queer person who isn’t out to their family, someone seeking an abortion, Black youth wanting to learn about movements for justice, or a mom looking for gender-affirming care for her kid are all placed under greater threat when what they read, who they are, where they live, and more sensitive personal data is gobbled up by Big Publishing and Big Tech. Such data can be sold on to the data brokers that fuel vigilantes and extortionist scammers, be subpoenaed by state attorney generals looking for a ready-made list of people to investigate and prosecute, or used by racist, bigoted algorithms to assess the so-called risk of offering someone a lease or a bank account. People know that apps are spying on them. Now, they’re going to be more cautious than ever in even picking up a diverse book, or one on a topic that they might face consequences for reading down the road. With libraries being such a major purchaser of diverse books, this spying bodes poorly for the future of diverse perspectives in publishing.

By scanning and loaning the print books they own, the Internet Archive maintained the only meaningful digital reading alternative to this system of surveillance, and hope for a future where libraries might build alternatives that center the privacy needs of their patrons and the literary community at large.

Now, 500,000+ books that the Internet Archive offered are gone. Libraries used to defend and celebrate reader privacy, but with publishers forcing expensive digital book licenses on them and now this decision, it looks like they simply can’t anymore. It’s a sad day for book people, particularly for disabled, rural, and low income readers who rely on libraries, and all those who want to write without the threat of erasure or read without the fear of surveillance and punishment, including 25+ civil and human rights organizations like GLAAD, Color of Change, and Presente.org.

Further, it’s absurd to think that a library or a used bookstore or a reader with a shelf full of print books might need permission from a publisher to loan or sell their property—and yet that is the world this decision moves us toward.

One where ownership of books no longer exists and book banners putting the pressure on can force publishers to revoke access to, edit, or delete every copy of a digital book with no transparency. We can’t let this decision threaten the vital records of our time that are held in digital books, or threaten the future of libraries. No one wants a world where libraries are just some Netflix spewing out whatever content Big Publishing and Big Tech allow them to temporarily license. In the wake of this decision, we’re going to strengthen our fight for state and federal legislation to restore libraries’ and readers’ rights to own, preserve, and access all books, regardless of what format they’re published in or who might want to censor them.

With information on the Internet less trustworthy than ever and book bans sweeping the nation, we need real and equitable sources of accurate information now more than ever. Namely, we need empowered libraries and empowered librarians more than ever. Instead, we’re getting the opposite, and that can’t stand.”

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