M.E.B.A. Members Shine Through Dark Days in New York City
Transcription
M.E.B.A. Members Shine Through Dark Days in New York City
MEBA NEWS O n that black day, iron-willed members defied the danger and sailed into a war zone deter- mined to alleviatethe suffering of a city under siege.Forthe MEBAmembersplying the watersaround New York Harbor, the responsewas immediatewhen two airliners,guided by terrorists,tore into the World TradeCenteron September11. Staten Island Ferries the order of the day but Capt. Palese made a quick decision as the enveloping horror unfolded. Realizing that it would be a danger to dispatch his passengers onto a battleground, he made the call to deliver the ferry back to the safe haven of Staten Island. "It was absolutely the right call:' reflected ReserveCapt. Jim Capelonga. Capt. Pareserecounted that they "proceeded past the slips and through the Buttermilk Channel, and then through the Bay Ridge Anchorage. I was trying to avoid being out in the open for too long, and possibly becoming a target." The crew was able to keep 3,500 frantic passengerscalm until they could safely offload them in St. George. Soon after, the NEWHOUSE made a beeline back to Manhattan to assist in the mass exodus. 'The Aboard the JOHN F. KENNEDY, GO\/: HERBERT H. LEHMAN and the AMERICAN LEGION, crews were brought face to face with the enormity of the circumstances.On the LEGION, Capt. Daniel Cruz was on his approach to Manhattan as the billowing smoke and debris obliterated all visibility and cloaked the slip in a wall of darkness. When it seemed impossible that the ferry could safely dock, a gust of wind blew in, temporarily clearing the path. "We're gonna go in," the Captain announced as the crew prepared to come to the aid of thousands of desperate citizens clamoring to get off the island. Mate Billy Vogel recollected that the 3,000 passengers that piled onto the vessel were MEBA memberCapt. JimmyParese was closingin on ManhattanIsland on crew all knew what mummified in a his 8:45a.m. run with a boatloadof paswe were returning to, Capt. JoseCasaisand A/C Jim Capelonga. layer of soot sengerseying the curious smokeemanatyet they all undershuffling around ing from the North Towerof the World stood the importance to return," said zombie-like -their trauma palpable. TradeCenter.As the SAMUELI. NEWCapt. Parese.The NEWHOUSE was the When they marched off the ferry in HOUSEnearedGovernor'sIsland and first boat to pull into the slip on the Staten Island, Billy had to prevent an beganits final approachinto lower orange sea of dazed passengers from Manhattan,PareseandAsst. CaptainPhil Whitehall side and they were met by thousands of hysterical New Yorkers des- mindlessly walking off with the lifejackCarroll gapedin horror from the pilotperate to flee the chaos. As they filled the ets. houseas terroristscontinued their insidiboat to capacity, the first Tower came The CoastGuard immediately ous assaulton Tower2 with a second dropped their "12-hourrule" allowing strike. Mass confusionand shockbecame down and "a cloud of smoke, dust and ash blanketed the area, reducing visibility NYC workers to toil well into the night to zero." Panicked passengersinstinctiveand continuethe incredible outburstof ly lunged for the lifejackets under their compassionon behalf of the strickencity. seats preparing for a further calamity. Many of the ferry membersworked on The crew had to rely on radar to make fumes for over 18hours seekingsometheir escape through the blinding smoke how to soothethe misery.Anothermemand debris. Deckhands attempted to ber worked a 35-hourshift. "Everyone restore calm to a full load of 6,000 filthy wants to help, but if you work 'em all and frenzied passengers,but the onboard there'll be no one to go the next day," bedlam multiplied when a false report filBilly noted. In their off hours,many fleet tered in that a passengerhad plunged membersdevotedtheir time to comb into the water. The ash-caked vessel throughthe ruins of the TradeCenter,in slowed to a halt as deckhands Richie the flickering hope that survivorscould Campanella and Mark Herman, through be unearthed. burning eyes,peeled the water searching Over on the KENNEDY,Capt. Frank for the non-existent man. ConVinced that Petersand Asst.Capt. Eddie Squirewere the boat was on fire and ready to sink, loading passengersfrom Manhattanas petrified passengers scrambled for the the secondplanehit. Later on in the day, remainder of the life jackets... medicalpersonnelsetup an improvised Crewmembers aboard the three other showeraboardthe boatand nurses Staten Island Ferries operating that day attendedto various afflictions. Eyewash Takenon themorningof Sept.11,befi>re thechaos. were also cast into a similar situation. was the primary servicein demand. 4 MARINE OFFICER NOVEMBER / DECEMBER 2001 Military Sealift Command - USNSCOMFORT On September11,theMilitary Sealift Commandhospitalship USNSCOMFORT,crewedby civilian mariners including MEBA members,lay at her berth in Baltimore,Maryland. First AssistantEngineerSteveStarrand an elite teamaboardthe floating first aid kit determinedthat they would begin readying the highly decoratedship for activation in casethey weregiven the word. Starrbeganto fire up ship systemsthat had beenrelying on shoresideconnections during their reducedoperatingstaCapt. Bill McLane, Mate Wayne SpeidelandA/C tus. His six-manteambeganprepping Mike Gansas. the boilersand readyingthe engineroom to getunderway."The ship was scheduled to performdock trials the following week," Starrpointed out, "so I began preparingthe ship to run on her own steam,figuring that evenif we weren't activated,I had just gottena headstarton the following week." That afternoon,the vesselreceivedthe call from MSCbrass that the COMFORTwould be activated and deployedto New York on a mission of mercy.Starr had given the ship a threehour headstart.The Military Sealift Commandused the time neededto fire up the plant and to fill the additionalbillets required for a seavoyage.MSC got 1st AlE Steve Starr aboard the USNS COMChief EngineerDon Skurkato cut his FORT. (Photo courtesy of Bridget Morris-MSC.) vacationshortand reportto the ship to head up the enginedepartment.The COMFORTis in ROS-5,meaningthat she Capt.JoseCasaispointed out that soon is preparedto sail within 5 days. enoughthe ferries weretransportingfire However,within 21 hours afterreceiving equipment,emergencyvehiclesand her activationorders,the 14-yearold vesarmoredtrucks aboard,among other sel that had performedso admirablydurgear.On the StatenIsland side,the suping the PersianGulf War,was readyto ply depot that had been setup was go. "The seven-man,reducedoperating indicative of an incredibleand rapid statuscrew'sfocus on ship readinesswas organizingeffort. Within threehours of the sole reasonwe could get underwayin the disasterthey had coffeewaiting for lessthan 24hours," Chief Skurkaattestthe workersand a basisfor operations ed. "SteveStarrdeservesall the credit." that would last for weeks. Dockedat Earle,New Jerseytwo days Originally the ferries wereslatedfor laterto pick up additional supplies,the morgue detail but when it becameappar- missionof the COMFORTwas altered. ent that therewereno bodies,the fleet Insteadof servingasa hospital ship, it continuedto supportemergencyteamsat was convertedinto a hospitalityship to Ground Zero until the City was reopened provide floating respitefor emergency by Mayor Rudy Giuliani the following relief workers.At 8:30p.m. on Fridaythe weekand accessfinally beganloosening 14th,COMFORTpulled into its tempoup. The ferries,which previouslyhad rary new address,at Manhattan'sPier 92 carried personalvehiclesin and out of nearWest52ndStreet.By Saturday, ManhattanIsland for the generalpopuarrangementswerebeing finalized to lace,havesincediscontinuedthat service accommodatethe swarmsof rescueand becauseof securityconcerns. relief workerswho neededa breather from the grueling labor being performed at the disaster scene,Chief Skurka noted that, "by Saturday morning, the majority of the engineering department had been awake for about five days, But the cause was worth it,ll The size of three football fields, the COMFORT's 1,000beds normally assigned to the infirm, were reserved for grateful Ground Zero heroes who needed a well-deserved rest, For the 16 days the ship received "guests," until the soup Mate Billy VogelaboardtheKENNEDY. kitchen was closed on the 30th of September, the COMFORT served 17/000 meals feeding over 6/650guests. Guests included New York City police and firefighters/ National Guardsmen, the N.Y. State Militia and volunteer relief workers. In addition, 4/400 pounds of laundry were cleaned, 1/359 medical massages were given by volunteer staff, and 500 "mental health consultations" were conducted. On the morning of the ship' s departure, Oct. 1st/ a message from Mayor Giuliani was piped aboard giving thanks to 335 military personnel and 54 civilian mariners -the gracious hosts of the COMFORT. Anny Corps of Engineers Vessels The Marine Division of the Army Corpswas readyto move when the call cameto rush to the relief of the devastated city. Crewmembersrepresentingthe New York,WIlmingtonand Philadelphia Districts werein town taking a safety coursearound the comer from the Trade Centerwhen the first planehit. It wasn't long beforethey flocked down to the fleet of Corpsvesselsto begin ironing out logisticalnightmares."All the personnel MARINE OFFICER NOVEMBER / OECEMBER 2001 5 MEBA NEWS an emergency dredging of the Hudson to permit barges transferring rubble to landfills to proceed unfettered. The dredgeship MCFARLAND, out of the Philadelphia District, played a large role in clearing out the barge route and also continued critical transport of supplies and personnel. The Army Corps vessels' quick and ongoing support allowed emergency personnel on the sceneto continue an unremitting response to the disaster area. destroyed with and the debris...11 Capt. and FDNY Marine Division his the extricated from his The floating pumping stations known the two the scene MARINE OFFICER NOVEMBER / DECEMBER 2001 After in a quest supplies as best they broken lower lung. As the and head carried decision was that ahead, was Hospital him weeks team that once-great search in for Street to combat ther to FIGHTER to paw with hellish the mission the inferno on the in crew 1973. water WITCH that ESSO BRUSSELS. was battling a raging mains in beyond Manhattan incurred were City Fireboats rendered of water for small and the clock to beat lines the pumped even coming know from,lI bered. inch out He FIGHTER's standpipe Pilot aft manifold connecting They flow began of IIThey water was remem- lIa separate was run directly to the supand Hudson. Gagliardi line The water the that, as round engines critical where York only back. four of the reported non-friction New 72 hours fire absolutely susattack worked blaze to land-based water didn't first fleet the 16- water couldn't connected began threaten- by the the crude the devastated to be the aging FIREFIGHTER the fire an when Now inoperable. proved the erupted century-old lower and ply the that combated with damage the source collided The tain in honored During heroically SEA complex. boat been tanker acre fur- FIRE- Administration's Award to spread was The decorated oil ship that having the ing by operations zone. most Maritime Ship a position blaze the war the FIREFIGHTER assumed Gallant the heartbreak- Meanwhile the commenced Harbor and of the through had is the Jordan their and the York than skeleton survivors. ravaging New and -less Lt. the fireboat, 1938 Vesey home continue oldest built treatment ordeal, Towers and fleet's Capt. City incredibly return returned wreckage ing sure Jersey later. Following his the Manhattan immediate to to the inundated. rehabilitation allowed back made at the where continued two met trauma a punctured gurney, likely they sustained trauma, to avoid were wounds had him 2 on a makeshift Radioing to stabilize his and SMOKE Fuentes team severe hospitals of on medical dress extremities made of one to recover Fuentes they Gagliardi crucial could. ribs, to his care- ambulances able for Captain the official Pilot for was team window burning head fastened Dept. grave, He upon His from the Fire the twisted the ailing stumbled carnage. extremities the through Building.1I 6 lower would-be squeezed silence falling protruding rubble. fully enough therevolunteeredto help automatically:' as the New York City Fireboats are a frenoted JoeMeyersfrom the New York quently forgotten commodity in a city District who was pulled awayfrom the surrounded by so much water. The aging classroom."Without a secondthought, fleet is often dismissed and left to wither they placedthemselveson duty." Initially, away, remembered only when something the Corpsmannedthe Motor Vessels bad happens on the Harbor. HA1TON,HUDSON,HAYWARD,GELOn September II, a recall was issued BERMANand DRIFTMASTER,as well as for all members of the fireboat fleet. Lt. theM/V HOCKINGand NEW YORK Terrence Jordan and firefighters Robert SURVEYBOAT#1. They immediately Spadaro and Paul Coulbourne left deployedtheir boatsas evacuationvesEducational Day at Randall's Island and sels.Fast-actingcrewswhisked thouconverged on the Brooklyn Navy Yard. sandsof stunnedsurvivors acrossthe They were met by Pilots Scott Hanson waterto Caven'sPoint,NJ, where relief and Neil Yellen, along with vacationing stationswere quickly setup. CorpsperPilot Joe Gagliardi who had been plying sonnelcouldn't help but noticethe the Hudson that day on a pleasure boat. glazed-overdispositionof their passenIt was there they got the word from Pilot gersas they wereferried to safety.A Ed Mauro who reported that the World three-prongedmakeshiftmarina at Trade Center had collapsed and that Caven'sPointdivided offloading passen- FDNY Marine Division Supervisor gersinto the unharmed,the injured and Captain Al Fuentes was missing in the thosein dire shape.On the return trips, vicinity of the debris field. The marine the Army Corps vesselsshuttled firefightjoined by Engineer Paul Fornuto, ers and emergencypersonnelto the scene crew, Firefighter Sean McLoughlin, Marine of the disaster.Theyalsodelivered critiWiper Dennis Crowe and Safety Chief Sal cal suppliesto keepfireboatsand fire Posavetz readied the SMOKE 2, a fireboat trucksoperational.Resupplyinglandbuilt in 1958, now only usable as a tender. basedpersonneland equipmentproved Soon after, the Company picked up a dischallengingbecauseof the poor access tress call on the radio from Captain createdby the ongoing pandemonium Fuentes who had sustained serious and destruction.The New York District's injuries and had become trapped under a JoshDaskalakispointed out, "They were shower of debris from what was once the passingfive-galloncansby hand. There World Trade Center -near West Street was no other way to accessthe site." and Vesey. The SMOKE 2 docked at the Whateverwas requiredwas floated over. North Cove Marina behind the atrium of Suppliesincluded drinking water, the World Financial Center Building. Two antifreeze,oil and equipmentaslarge as teams were deployed to search for Capt. forklifts. Fuentes and any other "surface victims." TheHOCKINGbecamethe command "The scene was one of complete devastavesseland transportedCongressmen, tion," Lt. Jordan reported, "apparatus staff and Army Corps officials,including Chief of EngineersLt. Gen. Robert Flowers,to surveythe damage.The initial responsevesselswere later.joined by a host of Corps shipsincluding the WAMPANOAG, CATAUMETand the COLVIN.The vesselssoonbegantransporting structuralengineersand assisting in the removalof debris.The agencysuccessfullydealt with two pier collapses The NYC FireboatFIREFIGHTERat her berth and Corpsplannersbeganpreparing for in StatenIsland. the were with beneath they amid shoulders debris complete of sporadic Somehow, Fuentes equipment. Army Corpsshipsrespondingto thedisaster. on fire, exception from fivethe to the Verizon pumping at 11 Marine Engineer Ronnie B. West. a.m. on Sept. 11th and maintained their vigil and vital operations for ten days. The four pump, 134-foot twin-screw fireboat is capable of spouting out 20,000 gallons of water per minute at 150 psi. A grueling workload with antiquated equipment stretched the fireboat to the edge of its limits. "Every single pump needs an overhaul," Chief Engineer Dan Reddan moaned weeks later. "The pumps took a beating -a beating." Inside the vessel it was steaming. Lack of shoreside electricity to the DC powered vessel prohibited air conditioning or even a working refrigerator on the boat. The overheated engiPilot Joe neers had to use a Gagliardi cooler full of ice in and Chief the engine room to Dan Reddan cool down the bearaboardthe ings. FIREThe other fireFIGHTER. boats in the fleet continually met equipment challenges as well. On the JOHN D. MCKEAN, the boat experienced generator problems from the get-go. A flexible coupling (the connection between the motor and prime mover) broke while they were underway necessitating a welding job. The JOHN J. HARVEY, a boat that finished its service in 1991 and was recently saved from the scrap heap was pressed into service. Numerous problems plagued the noble crew of this floating museum and the diesel electric plant shut down after 36 hours. The pumps on the SMOKE 2 proved inoperable and the 43year old fireboat was sent back to the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The 40-year old reserve boat GO\/: ALFRED E. SMITH was also feeling its age. The KEVIN C. KANE, only nine years old, was able to join the FIREFIGHTER on the front lines. The 52-foot fireboat can only match a quarter of the FIREFIGHTER's water capacity, yet its age has allowed it to become the workhorse of the fleet. Double crews manned the fireboats. For the first several days, the Marine Division toiled 24 hours on/24 hours off, though many worked the first two days straight. They used much of their time off to join searchteams in a quest for their missing brothers. On one occasion,while rummaging through the "pit/l, Dan Reddan's day ended when he was surprised by a Brown Recluse Spider, one of six poisonous kinds of arachnids in the U.S., whose bite left him battling potentially fatal symptoms. On another day while sifting through the twisted wreckage of the World Trade Center, the men of Marine Company 9 came upon /Ian apparition so astounding/l it made them do a double-take. In a series of e-mail dispatches reprinted in Easton, Maryland's Star Democrat,Dan Reddan noted, /lThere are three sets of matched beams in a cross configuration, the center one wrapped in swaddling bombed-out clothing. It is all backlit with sunlight from the street and opening three stories up!/l Surrounded by a desolate wasteland, the crossesinduced an inspirational hope not experienced in some time by dispirited New Yorkers. That hope was essential for the Marine Division as they attended the endless funerals for their comrades in the weeks to come. Ten days of continuous pumping finally quenched the advance of the worst of the runaway fires facing the grid around the Towers. The response of the fireboat fleet saved the Verizon Building, which was proclaimed structurally sound enough to stand. On Sept. 20th, the MCKEAN took over the FIREFIGHTER's Vesey Street position and the 63-year old boat, its riveted hull worn down and in desperate need of plating work, headed back to its berth in Staten Island. The boat hasn't been out of the water for repairs in over six years. Though the poorly funded FDNY Marine Division is often ignored; its heroic crews exploited the maximum capabilities out of the ancient fireboats with staggering resolve and sheer know-how. Postscript During this horrendous and significant time in our nation's history, the eruption of human kindness and solidarity to fellow Americans was truly gratifying. MEBA Brothers and Sisters were part of this outpouring of humanity with their unbelievable tenacity and relentless response to adversity. The heroic accomplishments of our members on the Staten MARINE OFFICER NOVEMBER / DECEMBER 2001 7