WTC's Toxic Dust Still Raising Health Concerns in NYC

Valeriya Ivanova

Issue date: 10/10/07 Section: Features

As America recovers from 9/11, toxicity investigations continue to see if the dust and debris poses a definitive threat to the public. During the aftermath of 9/11, many people came to NYC to help fellow Americans recover bodies and what was left of the World Trade Center (WTC). The air, filled with toxins from the plane crash and collapsed buildings, was extremely polluted; many workers and bystanders both suddenly and later became sick.

Today NYC offers a few programs for victims of the aftermath. They can either consult with one of the member centers of the New York State Occupational Health Clinic Network or contact the World Trade Center Health Effects Treatment Program. The programs offer medical testing and treatments, along with counseling to the workers and volunteers who suffer health problems as a result of their work at the WTC.

The treatments are provided free of charge if the patient can prove their health issues correlate directly to the WTC site.

However, not all of the WTC symptoms have not been discovered by health officials. Names like "World Trade Center cough" has been used around within the city and in hospitals.

According to the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), "At least 10,000 New Yorkers have suffered short-term health ailments from WTC generated air contaminants." 1.2 million tons of building materials were mixed with thousands of gallons of jet fuel containing benzene and other toxic chemicals.

This also includes about three hundred tons of asbestos in the buildings. CBS 2 News revealed documents saying, "Lower Manhattan was reopened a few weeks after the attack even though the air was not safe."

A memorandum found in 2001 stated the building's owners put pressure on the mayor's office in order to reopen more of the city as quickly as possible. The memo also revealed that the Environmental Protection Administration were not rushing to make any data results available for the citizens of NYC; the public was not informed of the air quality status after the disaster. Government officials still seem to give no direct answer regarding the NYC air.

On Aug. 18, the Deutsche Bank tower, located at the WTC area, caught on fire throughout many of the upper levels. Two firefighters died in the hospital shortly after trying to put out the fire. Their death was a result of their lungs collapsing from all the toxic chemicals lingering inside the towers along with multiple other materials found afterward. After the August blaze, the NYC Fire Department revealed failure to check the Deutsche bank since the year 2005.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Viewing Comments 1 - 1 of 1

dave

posted 10/11/07 @ 11:59 AM EST

This article has no credibility. It claims that firemen died from toxic chemicals in the DB building. They died from lack of oxygen due to the fire. (Continued…)

Post a Comment

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Poll

What was your reaction to last week's Room Selection Daze (err, Days)?
Submit Vote

View Results

Advertisement