Ceremony Ends Search for WTC Remains
      July 15, 2002 4:19 PM EST
      By: Sara Kugler Associated Press



      NEW YORK (AP) - The gruesome task of picking through the World Trade Center
      ruins for human remains finally ended Monday with a mournful ceremony at the
      Staten Island landfill where the work has gone on for the past 10 months.

      "The people who worked here to recover the remains, who worked here to give
      some kind of closure to some extent, this day is a day to say thank you to you,"
      Mayor Michael Bloomberg said at the Fresh Kills Landfill.

      Relatives of some of the 2,800 victims dabbed their eyes during the 25-minute
      ceremony, which included mournful bagpipe music and an invocation from the
      Rev. John Ryan, who asked the audience to
      "pray for our dead, give them rest eternal."

      The landfill became the final stop for the trade center rubble, which was delivered by
      truck and barge and then sorted for remains, personal property and criminal evidence.

      At the height of the operation, 7,000 tons of material were processed each day as
      workers wearing respirators watched debris go by a conveyor belts and stopped it
      when they spotted a bone fragment or other remains.

      The excavation of the ruins in lower Manhattan ended last month, and the last
      truckload of debris arrived at the landfill June 28.

      Hundreds of easily identified personal items such as IDs and credit cards have
      been returned to families.

      Bill Doyle said he frequently visited the landfill to thank the workers who found his
      son Joseph's driver's license and credit cards in February.

      "That's the only remains we've gotten back," Doyle said. "I think by showing our
      support up here, it meant a lot to these workers and they actually tried even harder"
      to find remains.

      Before the ceremony, firefighter Robert Johnson held back tears as he described the
      labor-intensive work, which for several months continued around the clock.

      "Along the conveyor belt, here comes a woman's shoe. I pick it up to see if there's a
      piece of foot in it," Johnson said. "Then I think about the person who wore it.
      You know somebody had that shoe on."

      Of the 2,823 people believed killed, remains of about 1,200, fewer than half, have been
      identified. The medical examiner's office has nearly 20,000 body parts in cold storage.





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