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March 29, 2005
Aftermaths of
the 9/11 Disaster
An Interview
with Firefighter/Author Dennis Smith
by Jenna Orkin
[This
is an interview with Dennis Smith, author of
Report From Ground Zero, regarding
aftermaths of the 9/11 terrorist attack. It was
conducted by Jenna Orkin of the World Trade Center
Environmental Organization.]
Last
week the Court of Appeals ruled that the New York
City Fire Department must release interviews with
firefighters held after 9/11, with the exception of
sections that might cause embarrassment or
pain.
Like any discussion of the horrors of that day
and its aftermath, the following interview with
ex-firefighter and author Dennis Smith may cause
pain but Smith was generous nonetheless.
The interview took place December 9, 2003 in
Smith's apartment on the Upper West Side, near ABC
studios where Smith's son, one of five children,
was a producer. It was in an office at these
studios that a baby was exposed to anthrax shortly
after 9/11. (He recovered.)
We had already spoken on the phone about Smith's
take on the health issues of firefighters at Ground
Zero, which I wanted to know about for a memoir I
was writing on the environmental disaster of 9/11.
But it turned out that Smith had intended some of
his remarks to be off the record so he suggested a
second interview in person.
He was a trim man, small by firefighter
standards. The apartment was furnished in the muted
tones of the 18th century, the shelves stocked with
art books. Voltaire's desk rested against the wall.
I knew it was Voltaire's desk because I'd asked;
Smith had mentioned it in his book on the recovery
effort, Report
from Ground Zero: The Story of the Rescue Efforts
at the World Trade Center.
"It's from his house in Switzerland," Smith
began, "but I don't think he ever wrote at it.
Anyone who knows anything about Voltaire knows he
dictated as he walked."
"What does it feel like to write at it?"
"I just do handwritten correspondence there,
Ma'am. My computer is upstairs."
The polite firefighter in response to a woman's
silly question. We'll get past my golly-gee
gawking; I had to ask.
"I was concerned about what you wrote. I hadn't
intended all that to be published."
I can imagine that concern: "Aagh!" It's a
reaction one frequently encounters when it dawns on
people you're writing a book; anything they say may
be used against them. Considering which, Smith has
been the consummate gentleman. Anyway, I don't want
enemies, certainly not among the good guys.
"Sometimes I think I should wear a sandwich
board that says, 'Warning: Memoirist at Work,'" I
reply. "What would you like to say about being at
Ground Zero?"
"We knew the place was unhealthy. What we don't
know is how those carcinogens work together.
Asbestos has a 5-20 year incubation period."
"Even forty."
"Forty. But we don't know if some of these
contaminants can have an effect in two years."
In our previous conversation, Smith has
mentioned several cancers among Ground Zero workers
which some medical professionals believe may be
attributable to exposure to 9/11 contaminants.
"I've heard people say that there will be a time
bomb effect," he says now.
"You wrote that firefighters had trouble with
their eyes. What was the diagnosis?"
"People's eyes got filled with microscopic
pieces of dust. Many firefighters' eyes were caked
shut. My eyes were caked. Others were so bad they
had to go to the hospital to have their eyes
opened. I used a spray bottle of a clear medicinal
water. [The next sentence, which is
indecipherable in my handwritten notes, mentions
saline solution.] But that's nothing new for
firefighters."
"Yeah. You talk in the book about how
firefighters crawl through smoke, coughing til
they're nearly unconscious, as part of their
training. It's called, 'taking a beating' and it
would violate OSHA regulations."
"OSHA didn't exist at the time we were doing
that. But the conditions for firefighters are
definitely unhealthy. In New York CIty there's a
lung cancer bill for firefighters so that it's
presumed to be caused by the job."
"Even if they smoke?"
"I think so. Do you smoke?"
"No."
"Does your son smoke?"
"No. My father smoked."
"Is he alive?"
"No. He died of a brain tumor at
fifty-seven."
"That's not from smoking."
"The primary tumor may have been somewhere
else."
"And metastasized, you mean."
"Yes."
"My children smoke. I'm always after them. But
there's a myth that the lungs repair themselves in
five years.
'At Ground Zero there was a group of doctors
who'd created a cleansing system that consists of
repeated saunas, exercises and vitamins. It was
developed by L. Ron Hubbard. Of course some doctors
say any firefighter would feel better after doing
four saunas a day."
"Did insurance pay for this?"
"No. The Church of Scientology paid for it, for
firefighters only. Their offices were down around
Fulton Street. An ornate, yellow building from the
1890's. Do you know it?
'These people had a big heart. But they were
also trying to prove something. Toxic metals tend
to stay in the body. They don't digest out of the
body. The [doctors doing the treatment]
showed me towels of different color sweat - purple,
yellow, red... Detoxification exists only in sweat
according to them. The treatment took thirty
days."
"Did you do it?"
"No."
"Why not? It sounds like a vacation."
"It seemed like work to me. It took three hours.
You had to go on the treadmill... X and those
doctors don't think much of the treatment. But
these firefighters were desperate for some sort of
relief. They couldn't walk upstairs."
"Did they go back to work?"
"On night duty or sick leave."
"You talked in your book about Mafia involvement
in the fireproofing of the World Trade Center. Was
that the asbestos or the other stuff?"
"The other stuff. The World Trade Center was
under construction three years before they outlawed
asbestos. There was spray-on fireproofing. You've
seen it. It looks like rough caulking. It goes over
the steel. What I was told - I'd have to go to my
notes but the information was credible enough for
me to write it - was that the steel had been lying
around rusting for months. It had to do with the
litigation with the Port Authority.
'The beams were not adequately cleaned before
the fireproofing was applied. It was put on top of
rust. When it was tested in '93 after the first
explosion, they hit it with a hammer and it fell
off. They tried to reapply it but they couldn't get
to the underbeam.
'The litigation lasted from the day the WTC
opened just about til '92 when Dibono was found in
the basement of the South Tower."
In his book Smith says that Louis Dibono, head
of the company that applied the fireproofing, was
part of the John Gotti family. He died from
multiple gunshot wounds.
"That litigation was created by the Port
Authority against this construction company," Smith
continues. "There wasn't any settlement. The
company went kaput."
"Would it have been possible to fireproof the
building?"
"No. Local law requires a rating system. Steel
can burn for two hours before it melts. The New
York requirement is more than in the rest of the
country. It has a three hour rating."
I imagine this is because the buildings are
taller or there are more of them.
"Did you read the paperback edition of my
book?"
"Yes."
"The last seven pages which were added later
have that information. The National Institute of
Standards and Technology were given a thirty
million dollar grant. It was laughable to me
because they came to the same conclusion I came to
in my book. They found that the floors collapsed in
the heat. The government has its heart in the right
place but [studies] have to do with keeping
people employed. I'd rather take that thirty
million and put it in public schools. Even if you
got ten kids to get A's instead of B's it would be
worth it."
"How has 9/11 changed your politics?"
"If anything it's made me more conservative
because I recognize we have to rely on our own
diligence to protect ourselves. This is true on the
left as well as the right. It's laxity of
government that's created chaos and almost all the
ability of radical Islamists to wreak havoc.
Bernard Lewis said we should have invaded Iraq in
1993 and [he cites other years] but we
didn't and we paid that price."
"But the terrorists didn't come from Iraq."
"That's true. But if there's any good to come
out of this invasion it's that it'll force those
governments to reevaluate themselves. They've left
most of their populations behind."
"That would take a long time, for them to change
their thinking to such an extent."
"Fifty years... Did you see Hillary Clinton's
fusillades yesterday? She said the Bush
administration didn't have to embroider
information. There was enough. If that's true, why
didn't we go into Iraq when the Cole was
bombed?"
"We should talk about masks. What kind of
respirators do firefighters usually wear?"
"It's not a respirator which is forced
air[?] This is a self-contained air
tank."
"How long does it last?"
"The new ones, about forty-five minutes. The
mask whistles when it's running low. You have to go
out and replace it."
"Why didn't the firefighters wear masks at
Ground Zero?"
"No one thought of the danger of ingestion. If
you can breathe they thought it was O.K. It's a
shame. I think there's room for litigation among
the first responders. [Since this interview,
several lawsuits have been filed.]
'Everyone assumed the environment was dangerous
in terms of smoke and dust."
This apparent contradiction of his previous
statement is probably resolvable by distinguishing
between long-term versus immediate dangers. But
this is not a trial and I let the contradiction
pass.
"Even the bosses didn't wear masks. It was only
in the second week the firefighters were asked to
wear masks. You know, the mask weighs thirty
pounds.
'Those first six weeks before the cranes did
most of the work were intensive. To have masks was
impractical. I used a filter mask when I took a
body out after decomposition but generally not.
Many firefighters purposefully didn't wear masks
because they wanted to smell bodies."
"Some people say that because Christy Todd
Whitman said the air was safe, rescue workers
didn't feel it necessary to wear masks." (I am one
of twelve original plaintiffs in a potential class
action lawsuit against Whitman and the EPA.)
"I don't think people felt that. Ground Zero was
led by smart people, experienced in emergency
services, or the police. They knew there's room for
litigation against the city.
'In any emergency you act beyond the norm to try
to mitigate. Any act of heroism is against the
norm. In my book I talk about the firefighters who
knew they might not come out. Terry Hutton saying,
"I want you to know I love you.' Other officers
said, 'We might not survive this.' All that is
evidence they knew the buildings could come down.
There were six examples."
"But firefighters go into burning buildings
every day."
"You don't think when you go into a burning
building that you won't survive. You have
confidence in the people you work with that you're
protected against flashover fires and holes. There
are always indications a building is going to
collapse. The chief is trained to look for cracks
in the wall, separations in the bricks."
"So what would the litigation against the city
be for?"
"For not insisting that everyone wear
masks."
"They did insist at the Pentagon."
"Christy Todd Whitman explained - I don't
remember if it was to my satisfaction or not - that
she didn't mean the air was clear."
"If the city had said, 'You've got to wear your
mask,' would the firefighters have done it?"
"I think so. Of course you'd have to have enough
tanks and the facility to refill them."
"Lieutenant Manny Gomez testified he brought a
mask. But he was told not to wear it for fear of
panicking people." (He also testified at a hearing
held by the EPA Ombudsman that there were many
masks available but they went unused.)
"It doesn't surprise me. [On the other
hand] I saw a chief begging men to wear masks.
But the grief was extraordinary and the motivation.
So it was hard to boss people around. The chief
said, 'Put the mask on. The OSHA guys are here.'
Some people did it."
"How does this make you feel about Giuliani?" In
his book Smith praises the Mayor.
"He didn't have much to do with that. He
understood that the person who controlled the
information was central to the memory. This was the
first major attack on U.S. soil since 1812. When
Hawaii was attacked it wasn't a state.
'No one had the authority to say anything, not
EPA, not DEP. Giuliani had to say everything in a
way even the Governor couldn't."
"Did you think, based on what you saw, that
people should be allowed to move back in?"
"Then I did." He emphasized the word 'then' to
imply he no longer thought so. "When you hit a
piece of furniture," he hit the arm of the couch as
resident/activist Catherine McVay Hughes had hit
the table to make the same point in her interview,
"thousands of dust particles get released into the
air. You don't see them. But down there you could
SEE the residue. It would cloud up like
powder."
"How did it happen that they never found a
doorknob - everything was atomized - but they found
body parts?"
"They only found parts of 1250 people. So there
was a huge number of people for whom no DNA was
found. People who weren't atomized were protected
by firefighters, by their equipment.
'It's a very peculiar thing, how many naked
bodies were found."
"What do you make of it? The clothes were burned
off?"
"Or torn. When those buildings fell they
imploded like a huge mixer. A body didn't have a
chance to stay contained. The buidlings fell at 600
mph. It took twelve seconds. But 292 bodies were
found whole."
"What was being there like? I know you wrote
about some of that in your book."
"I suppose what I didn't say are those things I
felt shouldn't be said.
'The way the community of 9/11 worked, if
firefighters from Chicago came, they'd be let in. I
don't know if they were needed or not. But if they
had gloves and boots, they were allowed to
work."
'I remember one day seeing a bunch of
policewomen, I guess they came down from some
detail. Often people at the site weren't working in
full protective gear but in shirtsleeves and hard
helmets. They found a police officer's body. The
way things worked in the services, they found a
badge or a gun, they'd leave it to that service and
give it a military aspect. These people chose to go
into these buildings. They were taken with the same
stature as they had when they went in. I wondered
what was going through their minds as they carried
the body. It's rare to see eight policewomen
together."
"Why did the fires burn for so long?"
"You know how many long burning fires there are
in this country? There are fires that have been
burning for years. Tires are buried in a pit and it
would cost 43 million dollars to get to them to put
out the fire."
"Could the WTC fires have been put out sooner,
say, by injecting nitrogen?"
"No. The Fire Department was aware of the ways
to fight deepseated fires, how to dynamite the
walls down. But they took them down piece by piece
because it was safer to do it that way. They were
also concerned with the integrity of the slurry
wall."
"And the need to search for body parts."
"Yes. That was almost holy in the beginning, the
care and prudence given to the lifting of every
beam After that we needed the steel in order to
find out why the towers went down, to be prepared
the next time. There were grapplers that could lift
the steel chinks. Then they also had a system of
spotters with long-range telescopes and binoculars.
Others sat in the trucks. It's not foolproof. But
to understand empirically why the towers went down,
the Fire Department knew you'd have to have the
steel. When the Columbia went down we spent 40
million dollars to find out why."
"And there are a lot more skyscrapers than
spaceships. Some of that steel wound up in Third
World countries: South Korea, India."
"China too. If I'd been Mayor or head of the
Department of Design and Construction, I would've
said, 'Let's rent a field in New Jersey and put the
steel there for a couple of years.' Maybe they
thought of that and the EPA said it wasn't a good
idea. Who knows?
'Every beam was numbered and coded."
"You could see that?"
"Oh yeah. When steel melts, it bends and
weakens. It doesn't disintegrate like molten steel.
It loses its ability to hold."
"So you weren't astonished when the buildings
collapsed?"
"No. Anyone who's ever been in the WTC knows how
big it is. You see ten floors on fire, that's ten
acres." Some experts have raised questions about
the speed at which the towers fell and other
evidence which they say suggests that a controlled
demolition was also involved. "How are you going to
fight a fire like that? Last time I was in the WTC,
the June before, I was at an art exhibit and we had
lunch on the roof: Windows on the World."
"Have you fought wild fires like the ones out
West?"
"Sure. We've had huge brush fires in New York:
Queens, Staten Island, the Bronx, Orchard Beach.
None in Manhattan that I can think of.
'Those fires, the volume of fire, it's three
feet high for two blocks then suddently it's ten
feet high for two blocks.
'When you study to become a firefighter do they
tell you that at such and such a temperature,
dioxin forms and at another temperature some other
contaminant forms?"
"You take a course in it. You learn more about
the ability of fire to reproduce itself. There's a
phenomenon of air currents in a fire. You take
thirty candles and put them one foot away from each
other, they'll stay separate. Four inches away,
they integrate at the top and grow to twice their
size.' 'Years ago I went to the Mutual Company
factory, to their fire investigation lab to get
fire ratings. They burn everything there. If you
burn a strip of polyurethane holding it
horizontally it burns slowly. The carcinogens it
emits are extraordinary. They'd kill you in two
minutes.
'But if you place the polyurethane vertically,
say, a ten foot strip, the fire rises to the top in
thirty seconds. That's what happened in that
nightclub last year. The polyurethane was used as
soundproofing. Polyurethane flat burns with the
physical rules of radiated heat, say, from left to
right. Vertically, bottom to top it burns like
gasoline because heat rises. The natural instinct
of heat is like water seeking its own level. As it
rises it doubles its volume every sixty seconds. In
polyurethane it's twice as fast."
Jenna
Orkin has written articles for Counterpunch and
other websites on the environmental disaster of
9/11 as well as other subjects. She is an activist,
currently as Spokesperson for the World
Trade Center Environmental
Organization.
Because
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on its website does not imply acceptance or
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