
 
        
         
		THE FIGHT CONTINUES  
 9/11 survivors deal with long-term illness, face new risks amid pandemic 
 Firemen work around the World Trade Center after both towers collapsed.   Photo by Reuters/Peter Morgan 
 BY BEN VERDE 
 Twenty years after 9/11,  
 health risks are as prevalent  
 as  ever  for  fi rst  responders  
 and survivors.  
 For New Yorkers exposed  
 to the toxic air in lower Manhattan  
 in the aftermath of the  
 World Trade Center attacks,  
 9/11  never  ended,  says  attorney  
 Michael Barasch, who represents  
 thousands of victims.  
 “Not a day goes by without  
 one of my clients dying,” he  
 said.  
 In  the months  after, while  
 fi rst  responders  worked  at  
 Ground Zero, aware of the  
 risks  it  carried,  thousands  
 of offi ce  workers  returned  to  
 lower Manhattan, assured by  
 the  government  that  the  air  
 was safe to breathe — a fatal  
 mistake,  according  to  Barasch. 
   
 “The air is safe to breathe  
 — that was a lie,” he told  
 Brooklyn Paper. “The government 
  wanted to reopen Wall  
 Street,  they wanted  people  to  
 come back to their homes to  
 their schools to their places of  
 work, to show our enemy how  
 resilient we are. As a result, a  
 huge price was paid.” 
 Now, that price has folded  
 out in the form of over 400,000  
 non fi rst-responders who have  
 been diagnosed with a respiratory  
 COURIER LIFE, S A6     EPTEMBER 10-16, 2021 
 illness  traceable  to being  
 in lower Manhattan after  
 the attacks. 
 Many  victims  have  found  
 themselves growing ill over  
 a decade after the attack, like  
 fi refi ghter William Gormley  
 of Engine 310/Ladder 174 in  
 East Flatbush. Gormley spent  
 months working at Ground  
 Zero after the collapse and arrived  
 home  safely,  only  to  develop  
 bladder cancer in 2016  
 and die in 2017 at the age of 53.  
 His untimely death inspired  
 his daughter Bridget  
 Gormley  to  dedicate  herself  
 to  raising  awareness  about  
 the prevalence of post-9/11 illnesses  
 among fi rst responders  
 and survivors, which she says  
 even she was blind to before  
 her father’s death.  
 “I was a bit ignorant of the  
 post-9/11  health  crises,”  she  
 said. “This ignorance really  
 threw me for a loop.”  
 The Marine Park native recently  
 produced  a  documentary  
 on the health crisis titled  
 “Dust: The Lingering Legacy  
 of 9/11” and works to spread  
 awareness about post-9/11 illnesses  
 — and the free healthcare  
 that survivors are entitled  
 to through the 9/11 Victim  
 Compensation Fund, which is  
 chronically under-promoted  
 to survivors.  
 ‘Our own government lies  
 to people’  
 While the coronavirus  
 pandemic poses a health risk  
 to all Americans, particularly  
 the  immunocompromised,  
 9/11 survivors have faced particular  
 peril.  With  COVID-19  
 attacking the respiratory system, 
  those with preexisting respiratory  
 conditions are especially  
 vulnerable.  
 But with a life-saving vaccine  
 widely  available,  many  
 survivors have opted not to  
 take it, borne out of a distrust  
 in the government that authorized  
 it — the same government  
 that told them it was safe  
 to be in lower Manhattan.  
 That mistrust pared with  
 the  government’s  downplaying  
 of the virus in 2019 — with  
 then-President Donald Trump  
 insisting  it was  an unserious  
 fl u that would one day disappear  
 despite knowing this to  
 be untrue — has made many  
 reluctant to take the vaccine,  
 according to Barasch.  
 “That’s twice in the past  
 twenty years that our government  
 has lied to us,” Barasch  
 said. “So now when the government  
 comes out and says  
 the vaccination is safe — no  
 wonder  so many  people  don’t  
 trust the government.” 
 By the numbers 
 While 2,751 people died in  
 the attacks of 9/11, that tragic  
 number will  soon be eclipsed  
 by the number of individuals  
 who have since perished from  
 disease linked to their presence  
 at Ground Zero.  
 According to the non-profi t  
 Cancer Center, over 2,000 individuals  
 have already succumb  
 to  illnesses  attributable  to  
 9/11-related sicknesses.  
 In a study of fi rst responders  
 that were at Ground Zero,  
 the center found that they were  
 getting cancer at a stunning  9  
 percent higher rate when compared  
 with the general public  
 — representing just one type  
 of sickness related to the toxins  
 at the rubble site. 
 In  chastising  members  of  
 Congress  in  June  2019,  one  
 fi rst responder who had developed  
 cancer —  retired NYPD  
 Detective Luis Alvarez —  
 blasted the legislators for underfunding  
 the  compensation  
 fund while visibly ailing.   
 “You made me come down  
 here the day before my 69th  
 round of chemo, and I’m going  
 to  make  sure  that  you  never  
 forget  to  take care of  the 9/11  
 fi rst responders,” he said.   
 Alvarez died a week later. 
 9/11: 20 YEARS LATER