REMEMBERING 9/11, ALWAYS.

It has been 21 years.  I have shared my memories of 9/11 and the days that followed to commemorate my friends, colleagues, workers and union members at 32BJ. I first published this blog in 2017 the first year of my Road2Reinvention, and I edit it each year as appropriate.  I appreciate you reading it, again.  In memoriam to the workers who died that day and the workers who survived.

21 years ago, on an exceptionally beautiful Tuesday morning I rose from the McPherson Square Metro to walk the three blocks to my office at the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) office at L Street NW, Washington, D.C.  It was a beautiful morning; no humidity and the air and sky was a crisp blue and clear.  There was an announcement in the subway, which was garbled, like all the announcements in the Metro.  All I heard was “blah, blah, blah…Pentagon”.  As I walked toward my office, I realized there was an unusual amount of traffic congestion, horns honking, and people streaming out of office buildings.  Usually at 9:00 a.m. people were going into offices, not running out.

Washington, D.C. was in complete panic, and I learned as soon as I got to my office the subway was now closed.  A colleague told me the city was evacuating.  She offered me a ride home and we sat in traffic for an hour traveling only a few blocks.  Because she was trying desperately try to get home to her family in Maryland, I got out and walked home to Capitol Hill.   I am certain I got home before she did.  Walking across Washington D.C. is one of my fondest things to do and on 9/11 it is an annual memory.

A few days later, I was sent to New York to assist SEIU 32BJ navigate the federal, state and local government bureaucracy in the time of our national crisis.  32BJ is the largest building services union in New York City.  The members are doormen, cleaners, property maintenance workers, security officers, building engineers, school and food service workers, and window cleaners.  24 union members died on 9/11.

Why on earth was I being sent to New York!  What could I possibly do to help?  I was only a Legislative Advocate (Lobbyist).  But my experience representing public employees and understanding the unemployment compensation system and other government programs would come in handy.

In the mist of such tragedy, the benefits of union membership were paramount to the 1,200 plus workers who worked in the World Trade Center buildings and had lost their livelihood.  The buildings they cleaned and cared for were gone and so were their jobs. 

Roko Camaj spent nearly half his life suspended from ropes over 1,300 feet above ground working outside of the original World Trade Center. Born in the small Balkan country of Montenegro, he immigrated to the United States in 1969.”  He was known to say he loved his job, “at the top of the world”.  Another window washer was instrumental in saving lives, “A man standing next to Jan Demczur reached into the window washer’s bucket and seized the Squeegee handle. It took them 90 minutes from the moment the elevator cab had halted in the shaft, but they reached safety only minutes before the tower collapsed—the second tower to do so. The tool that saved their lives, the Squeegee handle”  The handle is now part of theSmithsonian exhibit at National Museum of American History.

32BJ offices were only a few blocks away from the World Trade Center.  Those blocks were filled with pages and pictures, “have you seen this person”.  I am forever haunted by those flyers fluttering in the wind.

Yet, I was incredibly proud and privileged to have met and helped union members in the days following 9/11.  I was concerned that some of the janitors might be undocumented, but the World Trade Center was the premiere building in New York City.  The least senior janitor had worked in the building over 10 years.  They weren’t undocumented, but there were major language barriers to overcome.

I remember one particular eastern European woman, she had been a school teacher before she immigrated, because her English was not very good instead of being a teacher she worked as a janitor.  She had cleaned the same floor of the World Trade Center for over 15 years.  She was my age, single, educated but worked as a janitor.  Her English was still not very good after years of being a U.S. citizen, because as a cleaner she didn’t converse daily with co-workers, she worked alone and was invisible to the people who occupied the offices she cleaned.  There by the grace of being born in the U.S., I really identified with her.  She was alone, no family and her co-workers spoke many different languages.  But her union family step-up and took care of her.

The union officers and staff worked to get all the members onto unemployment as quickly as possible.  The NYC unemployment phone system had collapsed, because of the thousands of people who lost their jobs that day.  Also the unemployment system only offered translations services in Spanish and a few Chinese dialects.  32BJ workers were from all over the world, but the World Trade buildings were mostly Eastern Europe, Africa, and Asia.  The Union helped every worker complete paper applications giving each member personal assistance.

Each day a union meeting was held on the first floor of the 32BJ building.  32BJ leadership told all the displaced workers “they were family”.   The union was going to get everyone back to work.  In addition, the union extended health insurance and granted a supplement $100 weekly unemployment benefit from the union trust funds.  At those meetings workers cried and hugged each other.  I was never so proud to be with union members, the union was an extended family taking care of one another, as it should be.  Later the union was able to negotiate an early retirement program so that older workers could retire and the 1,200 displaced World Trade Center workers would move to other buildings.  The union got everyone back to work in 6 months, without any government assistance, or any help from U.S. Senator Hilary Clinton.

I was incredibly privileged to attend those meetings and see firsthand the joy expressed by workers who had experienced such loss and tragedy.  I felt guilty that week, because being there was a privilege, and that week was one of the best weeks of my career.  

Following 9/11 I was also privileged to advocate for Comprehensive Immigration Reform in Congress for the next 17 years.  It was my work with 32BJ and other low-wage worker union members that made that fight so critical, and ultimately heartbreaking.

Each anniversary of 9/11, I remember the wonderful 32BJ members, staff and officers.  I am proud to be a union member, and now retiree. 

In 2019 32BJ lost a wonderful dynamic Presiden Hector Figueroa at age 57.  Hector was a tireless advocate for his union famly, he is missed.  RIP

About Alison Reardon

Working hard on retirement and my golf game.
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4 Responses to REMEMBERING 9/11, ALWAYS.

  1. Cathy Callahan says:

    Thank you, Alison, and thank you for your service,

  2. Steven says:

    Wow Alison! What a sad and very “heart filling” story. How fortunate those people were to have someone like you helping them. The stories behind the scenes, like this one, really make one think about all of the people that suffered in so many ways as a result of that event. Thank you for sharing!

  3. Leah says:

    I just walked through security at Newark airport when solemn silence took over the busy airport. It was the moment 18 years ago when the first bld was hit. I was grateful for the screening process at that moment. Leah

  4. Cathy Callahan says:

    We all remember where we were that day. I was in a Federal facility in Shepherdstown, W. Virginia in a two week executive development class. The facility was sealed shut but our class – some from the Pentagon, some from the White House and some who had staff at the WTC voted to keep going. Everything changed that day for all Americans.

    I thank you again, for your service.

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