Ground Zero Cleanup Ends May 30
-- Ground Zero Cleanup Ends May 30
N E W Y O R K, May 16 — The grueling cleanup and search for remains at the World Trade Center site will end with a solemn ceremony on May 30 for workers and victims' relatives, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said today.
"This is a symbolic end of the process and a way of saying thank you to those who have worked so hard and taken such risks," he said.
The last heap of Sept. 11 debris is expected to be hauled away by then.
The job will have been completed three months faster than city officials had predicted — in part because of the extraordinarily mild winter — at a cost of about $750 million, or one-tenth the initial estimate of $7 billion.
Thousands of people have worked for more than eight months in a practically nonstop effort to find victims' remains and remove the 1.7 million tons of rubble.
The May 30 ceremony is set for 10:29 a.m. — the moment the second of the twin towers fell — and will be held at the seven-story crater where the skyscrapers once stood.
The service, which is expected to draw thousands of victims' relatives and rescue workers, will include the ceremonial removal of a 30-foot steel column that was part of the south tower. It is the last piece of steel still standing.
During the ceremony, a flag-draped stretcher will be carried from the site, symbolizing the human remains that were not recovered.
"We have an obligation to those left behind and to everybody else to make sure that the terrorists know that they did not win," Bloomberg said.
More than 2,800 people died in the attack. More than 1,000 victims have been identified, about 300 through DNA alone, and nearly 19,500 body parts have been recovered. But no remains other than small bones have been found in recent weeks.
Some victims' relatives have expressed concern that setting an end date would put the priority on finishing, rather than finding remains.
"Let me remind you that the recovery effort will not finish on May 30," Bloomberg said, noting that debris removed from the site will continue to be examined at a Staten Island landfill.
The backbreaking task began as a hand-and-bucket search for survivors in the hours after two hijacked jetliners brought down the twin towers. The last survivor was rescued from the smoking, 10-story rubble pile on Sept. 12. As days turned to weeks, the work shifted to the recovery of human remains, and contractors and heavy equipment were brought in.
—The Associated Press
States Seek Moments of Silence in Schools
C O L U M B U S, Ohio, May 16 — Just before taking a test, senior KatieMarco often says a short, silent prayer for success.
"It helps a lot, especially when I don't feel like there's anything more I can do to help myself, I leave it in the hands of God," said Marco, a student at Cuyahoga Falls High School in northeast Ohio. "I make the time to do it."
Although the U.S. Supreme Court has outlawed mandatory school prayer, at least a dozen states this year have considered whether their public schools should offer students a moment of silence each day.
Ohio simply put into writing that the state allows one minute daily for students to reflect, meditate or pray, and lets school districts decide whether to require that teachers set aside the silent time for students. The bill becomes law in July.
Lawmakers across the nation introduced most bills in the aftermath of Sept. 11 and a U.S. Supreme Court decision last October that turned away a challenge to Virginia's law. The events helped sponsors of previously introduced bills in other states gain supporters.
"These bills were clearly something that was a popular first response to the crisis in our nation," said Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United for the Separation of Church and State. "And, after Virginia, we expected we'd see a slew of them."
Other patriotic and religious legislation have popped up in states nationwide following the terrorist attacks. Lawmakers in several states pushed legislation to post the motto "In God We Trust" in schools and make the Pledge of Allegiance mandatory.
Before last fall, nine states already had laws that required a daily silent minute in schools. Many modeled their laws after Virginia's, which makes the moment mandatory and lists prayer as an option.
The Supreme Court has outlawed mandatory school prayer, but courts have said states may require silent periods as long as students are not forced or encouraged to pray.
Critics argue that such laws still threaten the Constitution's separation of religion and government.
"When educators set aside a time for reflection, that's not just providing the opportunity, that's encouraging prayer," said Raymond Vasvari, legal director of the Ohio branch of the American Civil Liberties Union.
The sponsor of Ohio's bill said students became confused because they didn't know they were allowed to pray silently in school and weren't told they could do so even though elected leaders prayed publicly after the terrorist attacks.
"It's kind of sending a double standard message," said Rep. Rex Damschroder, a Republican. "Every student across the state should have had that time to think about what happened to us."
Teachers in Ohio and other states already are allowed to set aside silent periods. Some say states should put the permission into law, to ease teachers' fears of violating state and federal constitutions.
Ohio lawmakers debated for seven months whether to include "pray" and require the silent period. Local-control advocates pushed to allow school boards to decide whether the moment should be mandatory.
Legislators in other states, including South Carolina, Pennsylvania, Iowa, Indiana, New Mexico, California, Illinois, Virginia, Louisiana and Missouri, have haggled over the same issues.
In Oklahoma, Rep. Russ Roach, a Democrat, said lawmakers can't agree on the wording in his bill, including whether "religion" and "prayer" should appear.
"I don't like mandating it," Roach said. "Unfortunately, a lot of our gung-ho members want just that."
Supporters argue that schoolchildren can use the time to do anything they wish — including stare out the window — as long as they are quiet.
"It's merely an opportunity for the individual to exercise his or her own freedom of conscience," said Stephen M. Crampton, chief counsel for the American Family Association's Center for Law and Policy in Mississippi. "It's not about forcing predisposed views about religion down people's throats."
The National Education Association, the nation's largest teachers' union, does not oppose the silent periods as long as the federal government doesn't mandate them, the moment lasts only a minute and a teacher's role is passive.
Marco, the high school senior, said laws allowing silent time might not even be necessary.
"Anyone who wants to pray silently can take a minute anytime, so I'm not sure this is needed," said Marco, 18, a Methodist.
— The Associated Press