Anger over 9/11 Museum exhibit that casts doubt on link between health problems and toxic Ground Zero air

By Dan Friedman New York Daily News

the panels in question Dan Beekman NY Daily News

the panels in question Dan Beekman NY Daily News

The government has recognized that first responders became ill from working near Ground Zero — but the 9/11 Museum isn’t so sure.

Responders and surviving family members are furious that panels at the museum’s “After 9/11” exhibit present the connection between the toxic dust around Ground Zero and the subsequent health issues of many workers as uncertain.

It’s the latest in a long list of complaints about the museum’s management and mission by victims’ families and responders, who point out that the 2011 James Zadroga Act, which helped cover victims’ health needs, settled the issue.

“It is inexcusable that the museum would project skepticism about the link between health impacts and WTC exposures, despite overwhelming medical evidence,” write the chairs of two committees created to help beneficiaries of the Zadroga Act in letter sent to museum head Joseph Daniels on Friday.

Museum spokesman Michael Frazier said the letter was under review. “Among our visitors have been tens of thousands of 9/11 rescuers and recovery workers. Anyone who has come to the museum knows their story and what they have endured is of great importance to us,” he said.

Kimberly Flynn and James Melius, who respectively chair committees of 9/11 survivors and responders, demand the museum rewrite what they say are three inaccurate panels before the upcoming 13th anniversary of the attack.

Flynn, whose committee includes downtown residents affected by the attack, said a group of survivors who toured the museum were jarred out of quiet contemplation into outrage by the exhibit.

“It looked like it had been vetted by Christie Todd Whitman’s attorneys,” she said, referring to the Environmental Protection Administration administrator who declared the air safe after the tragedy.

One panel says the Zadroga Act ensures medical treatment and compensation “for those with health conditions claimed to be related to the World Trade Center Disaster.”

“The word ‘claimed’ implies doubt on causation and contradicts the well-established fact that severe widespread health impacts have resulted from exposures to 9/11 smoke and dust,” Flynn and Melius write. They note federal programs are offering care to 67,000 people, including 2,800 cancer victims, whose illnesses are certified as tied to the attacks.

Another panel notes federal and city officials “were criticized for allegedly not providing timely and accurate information about air quality in Lower Manhattan.” The EPA’s Inspector General was among those who concluded government officials misled New Yorkers about air quality.

A third panel cites findings that dust from building materials, industrial chemicals, electronics and jet fuel residue was “hazardous.”

Use of quotation marks around the word unnecessarily questions the established danger of the air, Melius and Flynn say.

The sick “have to read on a museum wall that they only claim they are sick from breathing 9/11 toxins,” Flynn said. “That is just completely unacceptable. It’s an insult. It’s a lie. And the museum has to fix it now.”

This entry was posted in 9/11 Memorials, Health Issues. Bookmark the permalink.