בית פורומים חדשות אנש אין בילדער

9-11 פערדע יארצייט

שלום אורח. באפשרותך להתחבר או להירשם
הצג 15 הודעות בעמוד הוסף לדף האישי  דווח למנהל שלח לחבר
נשלח ב-12/9/2005 23:37 לינק ישיר 
9-11 פערדע יארצייט

קען נאך אמאל געשען אזא קאטאסטראפע אין נו יארק?


City marks fourth anniversary of 9/11

BY GLENN THRUSH, LUIS PEREZ AND JOSHUA ROBIN

September 12, 2005

The families of Sept. 11 made their annual pilgrimage to Ground Zero yesterday, burdened by familiar sorrows and a growing, gnawing anxiety that the world is forgetting them too fast.

Sasha Cardona, 15, whose father died in the 2001 attack, felt the tug of time and the shift of public attention to more recent calamities such as the London subway bombings and the devastation of Hurricane Katrina.

"It's sad because it seems like people are forgetting," said Cardona, whose father, Jose, was a clerk in a financial firm in the north tower.

There are no immediate plans to stop or scale back the annual day-long eulogy for the 2,749 people killed at the World Trade Center, officials say. The crowds around the ceremony may have seemed thinner simply because the anniversary of the worst-ever terrorist attack fell on a Sunday.

But there was an undeniable sense of urgency among family members yesterday.

Anjunelly Gartrell, 23, said she trekked from suburban Washington yesterday "to remember, to remember the legacy" of her mother, Maxima Jean-Pierre, who worked as a food service administrator at Cantor Fitzgerald.

Germano Riviera, 54, of Borough Park, worked at a nearby jewelry store in 2001, and was sipping coffee at Austin J. Tobin Plaza, between the Twin Towers, on the day of the attack.

"People tend to forget," he said of what seemed to be thinner-than-usual crowds outside the ceremony. "It used to be so many people who came here. For me, it's sort of like a shame. I guess life goes on."

Yesterday's event was dedicated to the brothers and sisters of those killed, with siblings reading names in a ceremony that began at 8:40 a.m. and concluded about 1:30 p.m.

"My older brother John lived in Technicolor; he taught me to wear bright colors and to love life," said Anthoula Katsimatides, who wore a hot pink shirt to celebrate her 31-year-old brother, who died in the north tower.

Former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani evoked the unity following the terrorist attack, a sense of togetherness that has been notably absent in the aftermath of the Gulf Coast hurricane response.

"I have no brothers and sisters and now you're all my brothers and sisters," Giuliani said, his voice cracking. "We all stand together."

Giuliani was joined by Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who hosted the event, Gov. George Pataki, New Jersey Gov. Richard Codey and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

During the ceremony, families stood on the western edge of the trade center site, where they had a panoramic view of the site's past, present and future. To their left was the glass-edged Seven World Trade Center, still under construction; in the middle was the pit, still unfilled after four years of planning and wrangling; to their right was the black-veiled, damaged Deutsche Bank building, which will soon be demolished.

The mourners descended down the ramp clutching photos, long-stemmed roses and each other's hands. They placed the flowers into twin memorial pools, as stray red, white and pink petals scattered on the dusty bottom of the pit.

The day was not without discord. Many family members are trying to block plans to stage wide-ranging exhibits at a cultural center next to the trade center's planned memorial, arguing that the project should focus on the sacrifices of victims and rescuers.

About 20 people reading names made those sentiments known by concluding with, "I pray that we will succeed in our efforts to protect your name and your legacy."

If there was any need to remind people how the attack changed the country, proof could be found on the corner of Liberty and West streets in the form of a Fire Department decontamination unit, stationed in the event of a chemical attack.

Firefighter Greg Bruno of Ladder 174 in East Flatbush, who was in that convoy, was sprawled on the marble steps of the World Financial Center in the sun. His gaze resting on the trade center site, and his thoughts veered to how much New York had changed since 2001.

"Everything's changed, and it will never be the same," said Bruno, 38. "You just knew so many of those guys," he said, referring to the Fire Department's 343 Sept. 11 fatalities. "A lot of guys."

Newsday .




דווח על תוכן פוגעני

מחובר
נשלח ב-13/9/2005 19:01 לינק ישיר 

upto
-----



Were 9/11 loans money well spent?
86 local firms got more than $12.5M

By Tim Logan
Times Herald-Record
[email protected]

The terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, had a huge impact on the mid-Hudson.
But did they really cost a Rhinebeck bistro more than $1 million?
Who knows. But that's how much Terrapin Restaurant received in loans intended to help small businesses recover from the effect of the attacks, according to data obtained by the Associated Press from the U.S. Small Business Administration.
Across Orange, Ulster and Sullivan Counties, 86 companies received more than $12.5 million in loans. They ranged from $2,600 for a courier in Monticello to $1.25 million for the Kiryas Joel Meat Market.
More than half of the local money went to just eight companies, including four recipients of at least $1 million.
Several of the larger loan recipients didn't return phone calls seeking comment yesterday. One who did called the program a lifeline.
"For my company, it meant being able to stay in business, as opposed to having to shut my doors," said Fred Watson, CEO of Watson Services in Newburgh.
His food services company lost a big federal contract in New York City after Sept. 11. It eventually had to close its Brooklyn plant and lay off 55 people.
A $530,000 loan absorbed some of the losses, Watson said, and gave him the cash flow to regroup. Today, Watson Services has picked up lots of business outside New York City and has nearly twice as large a work force as it did before the attacks.
"This loan, in my case, worked exactly the way it was supposed to," Watson said.
But that wasn't the case everywhere.
According to the Associated Press review, thousands of companies nationwide received loans through two programs designed to help businesses recover. Many, such as a South Dakota radio station, a Utah dog boutique and dozens of Dunkin' Donuts franchises, are a long way from Lower Manhattan and had no apparent connection to the attacks.
And that irks Ed Koren.
Koren and his wife, Betty, run Bridges Over Time, an antique dealership in Walden. A handful of Manhattan shows each fall provide most of their income, and in 2001, those shows were canceled.
"It hits you pretty hard," he said. "(The antique business) took about two or three years to recover."
The Korens received a $26,000 loan, and it helped make ends meet.
The government-backed loans didn't just help businesses recover. They also fueled growth.
Ideal Snacks in Liberty received $1 million in January 2003, while it was in the midst of a big expansion. Zeke Alenick, the company's owner, didn't return messages seeking comment.
The Kiryas Joel Meat Market got $1.25 million in July 2002. The money helped fund a $3 million chicken slaughterhouse that opened last year.
The market has changed hands since then, and new owner Joe Weinberger said he had "no idea" about the loan. Attempts to contact former owner Lipe Cohn were unsuccessful. Village Administrator Gedalye Szegedin said the project had created 100 jobs.
"I think it's a very successful investment," he said.
Others are worried about misuse of the program, and several members of Congress have called for an investigation.
But SBA spokesman Mike Stamler noted that there are two distinct programs, and that some officials were confusing them. One provided low-interest loans for companies close to New York and Washington that were directly affected; the other gave market-rate loans for companies hurt by the nationwide economic slowdown.
Many of the eyebrow-raising loans came from the latter category, Stamler indicated.
One of those was for Terrapin, the swank dining spot Josh Kroner runs in Rhinebeck.
He got a $1.075 million loan through the SBA to fund a move from West Hurley two years ago. Kroner said he didn't intend to apply through a disaster recovery program. He figures his bank tapped the program because that's where the money was. He said he only vaguely remembered being told about 9/11 recovery funds.
"I spent seven hours on closing day," he said. "To me it was all a blur of signing paperwork."
In the end, Kroner says, he didn't even get that great a loan. Today he's paying 9 percent interest.
"It's not exactly a favorable rate," he said. "I'm planning to refinance the whole package."


Five largest 9/11 recovery loans to the mid-Hudson.

$1.25 million: Kiryas Joel Meat Market, Kiryas Joel

$1.075 million: Terrapin Restaurant, West Hurley (has since moved to Rhinebeck)

$1 million: Ideal Snacks, Liberty

$1 million: Econo Lodge, Monticello

$722,000: Relax Inn, Cochecton



דדווח על תוכן פוגעני

מנותק
נשלח ב-13/9/2005 19:00 לינק ישיר 

shamos
------

Were 9/11 loans money well spent? that's what several members of Congress are worried about and have called for an investigation, about misuse of the program.

For example the Kiryas Yoel MonDroe Meat Market got $1.25 million in July 2002. The money helped fund a $3 million chicken slaughterhouse that opened last year.

http://vosizneias.blogspot.com/2005/09/911-loans-money-well-spent.html



דדווח על תוכן פוגעני

מנותק
נשלח ב-12/9/2005 23:39 לינק ישיר 

what's the question' of course it can happen again!, only with Hashem's help have we survived till today



דדווח על תוכן פוגעני

מחובר
   
בית > פורומים > אקטואליה וחדשות > חדשות אנש אין בילדער > 9-11 פערדע יארצייט
מנהל לחץ כאן לנעילת האשכול
הוסף לעמוד האישי  דווח למנהל שלח לחבר

bholext