[url]http://www.nytimes.com/2002/05/14/nyregion/14LAND.html[/url]
Sifting the Last Tons of Sept. 11 Debris
May 14, 2002
Sifting the Last Tons of Sept. 11 Debris
By DAN BARRY
At the other place, the place called The Hill, things are winding down.
Workers are decontaminating the barges, towing away equipment, spraying
the ground with a gray concrete sealant. Soon, the makeshift village of
sorrowful duty that sits on a remote landfill will exist only in the
memory of a few.
Every now and then, another person from another museum climbs the
southwestern slopes of Fresh Kills to bring the mixed message of
impermanence and posterity. Sometimes they want one of the destroyed
vehicles that are stacked like rust-metal bricks: a police car, maybe, or
one of the fire engines. Other times all they want is a poster or a sign,
like the hastily drawn site map hanging on an office-trailer's wall.
These requests are important, the people from the museums explain, so that
future generations can understand what happened there, in Lower Manhattan,
and what was done here, on this Staten Island landfill.
The men who built The Hill understand, reluctantly. Over the last eight
months, their operation, created in the genius of desperation, has sorted
through 1.6 million tons of material removed from the World Trade Center
disaster site. That work has uncovered more than 4,100 body parts, helping
to identify more than 150 victims.
Now, there are only 25,000 tons to be carted to the landfill from Lower
Manhattan, a small fraction of what was. In the next few weeks their
mission will be completed, their future certain only to the extent that it
will be nothing like what they have just gone through.
It will be hard to let go, said Richard Marx, a special agent of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation. "Time has stood still for us up here."
The place called The Pile, or ground zero, has become a part of the
reality of the city. It is in Lower Manhattan after all; the dismantling
of the debris from the terrorist attack of Sept. 11 has occurred on a
public stage, attracting hundreds of thousands of mourners and tourists.
But the place called The Hill seems at times to have existed only in
imagination. It is at the edge of the city, past a police checkpoint, on
top of a closed and infamous landfill. And it is where the remains of the
vast World Trade Center complex were taken, truckload after truckload,
more than 107,000 in all.
There, teams of government workers, most of them New York City police
officers, disappear into white protective suits and respirator masks to
search for body parts, jewelry or any object that might identify one of
the more than 2,800 victims. Some of them rake through the rectangular
fields of rubble laid out by bulldozers. Others stand before sifting
machines and try not to get dizzy as they watch the rocky, gray debris
tumble past on conveyor belts.
Anything that might be something is placed in a black bucket. Jewelry and
other items are photographed, cataloged, and stored away by the property
clerk's office of the Police Department. Human remains are kept in a
refrigerated trailer, then driven to the medical examiner's office. Many
body parts have been found, the workers say, but the most heartbreaking
discoveries — and often the most rewarding — are the hands and feet with
manicured nails. It means somebody's mother, or wife, or sister, or
daughter.
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