|
ARCHIVE EVENTS
A Home News Tribune
editorial
January 2004
No
landfill is a suitable burial site for the remains of World Trade Center
victims. Properly, Gov. James E. McGreevey acknowledged as much last
week, signing off on legislation that would move ash containing the
remains of WTC dead from the Fresh Kills Landfill in Staten Island to a
memorial at the trade center site. All that remains for the plan to move
forward now is for the New York Legislature to pass a similar bill.
Empire State lawmakers need not delay.
The
process would not be easy or inexpensive, and that has put off quick
support of the proposal. Relocation could cost as much as $450 million.
There are concerns that biohazards may be stirred up at the landfill
during the work. The plan also presents new design challenges at the
site chosen for the memorial.
But
New York lawmakers should get past their practical concerns for cost and
trouble -- as New Jersey lawmakers have managed to do -- by considering
the emotional closure that a proper burial would represent, both for the
families of the victims and for their countrymen.
"Right
now I feel that my son and 2,700 others were dishonored by this crude
way of being mixed in with household garbage as an eternal resting
place," said Arthur Russo, a founding member of WTC Families for
Proper Burial. "It's as crude as can be."
His
indignity should remain the nation's indignity so long as the fragments
of Americans who died at terror's door lie scattered about a dump.
The
victims, and their memory, deserve better.
|
REMEMBRANCE WALK 2003 GROUND ZERO
NADAF CONFERENCE WASHINGTON DC NOVEMBER 2003

PRESS CONFERENCE NOVEMBER 2,2003 CARTERET NEW
JERSEY
WTCFFPB BANNER ON DISPLAY
|