Events
« Thursday September 16, 2010 »
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Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm
Nearly a decade after the destruction of the World Trade Center towers
in the Sept. 11 attacks, the toxic legacy of the dust cloud that covered
the neighborhood endures. DePalma (Here), a former New York Times
reporter who covered the attacks and their aftermath, dissects the
policy mistakes and bitter medical and legal clashes over the health
problems suffered by rescue workers, cleanup crew, and survivors. The
political and economic necessity of getting New York up and running
again left "no time for the great city to dwell on what the long-term
impact of the dust might be." DePalma methodically if occasionally
awkwardly traces the efforts of scientists and doctors to assess the
effects of the contaminated dust on the tens of thousands exposed, and
the methods used to determine compensation. The scope of the
aftereffects remains so vast that DePalma's account doesn't always
retain a sense of narrative urgency, but he does convey how outrageously
bureaucracy has stalled appropriate care for survivors and rescue
workers. "Trust collapsed with the towers, and dust buried the truth,"
he writes, and the path to retribution remains obscured.
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