The Daily News has posted six powerful videos featuring News photographers who documented September 11, 2001. The photographers, David Handschuh, Todd Maisel, Debbie Egan-Chin, Andrew Savullich, Susan Watts, and Ken Murray, offer their memories of the day—from the chaos to the unnerving silence after the buildings collapsed—with their photographs, many of which are extremely graphic (Handschuh remembers how people started jumping, Maisel describes body parts falling from the sky).
Intense Videos: Daily News Photographers Recount Covering Horror, Heroism Of 9/11
9/11 Memorial Waterfalls Tested At Ground Zero
The waterfalls at the 9/11 Memorial were tested yesterday, as preparations continue for its opening on September 11, 2011.
9/11 Families (Mostly) Look Forward To Meeting Obama Today
After laying a wreath at Ground Zero, President Obama is meeting with first responders and families of 9/11 victims today in his first visit to Ground Zero since 2008 and since announcing the death of Osama bin Laden. Retired fire chief Jim Riches, whose son, a firefighter, died while responding to the World Trade Center attacks, was invited to meet with the President, and he said, "I’m gonna thank him for what they did. He was a man of his word. He did [what] he was supposed to do. There will be no closure for me; my friends are not coming back. But I think he deserves an ‘atta boy’ for doing what they did."
9/11 Families Don't Want 9/11 Remains Underground At 9/11 Museum
Families of 9/11 victims killed at the World Trade Center site have expressed their unhappiness with the National 9/11 Memorial and Museum's plan to place the unidentified remains of over 1,000 victims placed in the museum's underground portion. Sally Regenhard, whose son Christian was a firefighter who died on 9/11, said, "We were always led to believe by the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation that we would have a separate, above ground tomb-like structure."
Obama Signs 9/11 Health & Compensation Bill In Hawaii
Yesterday, President Obama signed the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act into law, ensuring that first responders to the September 11, 2001 attacks at the World Trade Center would receive $1.5 billion in health benefits and $2.7 billion in compensation. Obama, who signed the bill from his vacation home in Hawaii, said in a statement that it was an honor to sign the bill, "We will never forget the selfless courage demonstrated by the firefighters, police officers and first responders who risked their lives to save others. I believe this is a critical step for those who continue to bear the physical scars of those attacks."
GOP Hates Sick 9/11 Workers, Filibusters 9/11 Health Bill
Forty-one Republican Senators voted against the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act, which would have provided $7.4 billion in health care and compensation to 9/11 responders and their survivors. According to the AP, "The bill failed on a test vote, 57-42. Fifty-seven Democrats voted for the bill and 41 Republicans opposed it. Sen. Harry Reid, the Democratic leader, switched his vote to 'no' at the last moment, a parliamentary move that allows him to bring the measure up again for a vote." And the GOP refused because they want the Bush tax cuts extension passed first. Now we know: Money for millionaires > 9/11 first responders.
WTC Attacks Claim Victim #2,751
The city medical examiner ruled yesterday that the October death of 45-year-old Leon Heyward was caused by cancer he got from breathing in toxic dust at Ground Zero. He becomes the first addition to the official total since a Staten Island woman's death was linked to dust inhalation almost two years ago. Heyward worked as an investigator and helped get handicapped co-workers out at the Department of Consumer Affairs Office on Church Street after the planes hit. As the years went on, he began having seizures, became delusional and suffered memory loss. His sister told the News that the ruling is some vindication after Heyward had been denied worker's comp. She told the News, "There were a lot of people that weren't first responders. There are a lot of people walking around sick for the same reason and fighting the same battle we did." The medical examiner has declined to make similar rulings in half a dozen other cases.
Missing Since 9/11, Woman Now Declared Dead
An appeals court ruled that a doctor who had been missing before September 11, 2001 died during the World Trade Center attacks. The family of Dr. Sneha Anne Philip, last seen at Century 21 on September 10, had in courts for years trying to do so.
9/11 Responders Protest ME's Stand on Ground Zero Deaths
First responders gathered in front of the NYC Medical Examiner's office to protest how the ME has classified deaths seemingly related to Ground Zero illnesses. State Senator Eric Adams said he would introduce legislation making sure first responders who worked at Ground Zero will "get the same line-of-duty benefits" as September 11 victims. Recently, the ME's office has not named two rescuers, who worked at the World Trade Center site after September 11 and later...

