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PEP Archives | January
2002 Table of Contents |
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![]() Two members of the newly formed Compliance and Remediation Department examine an abandoned drum for hazardous materials. Along with two supervisors from Local 1422 and a Deputy Director who is a Local 375 member, the crew of seven respond to environmental emergencies in the 2,000 square-mile upstate watershed area. |
Pictured below are HAZMAT team members (standing from left): Lynn Sadosky, Dan Massi, John Duffy, Dominick Gencarelli, Bill DeGraw and Ted Pollack. Kneeling: Michael Cassar (left) and Richard Barrett.
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![]() Members of Motor Vehicle Operators Local 983 worked nonstop in the World Trade Center recovery effort and later transported sealed anthrax samples from stricken sites to laboratories for evaluation. |
The container held biopsy samples from the corpse of Kathy Nguyen, the 61-year-old Bronx woman who succumbed Oct. 25 to a mysterious case of inhalation anthrax. Ponce rushed the container to a waiting jet bound for the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta.
I thought about that poor woman, about the seriousness of biological warfare, about whether I could contract anthrax myself, said Mr. Ponce.
Normally, Health Dept. MVOs haul medical supplies to schools and hospitals and drive clean-up crews to vacant lots with health code violations. But after Sept. 11, Mr. Ponce and about 60 others worked nonstop on the recovery effort. Six weeks later, their jobs took on added urgency when the department called on them to transfer deadly anthrax samples and the CDC experts who detect the often-fatal disease.
In the weeks following the attack that stunned the world, the citys vulnerability was challenged again when anthrax-laced letters were mailed to newspapers, television networks and Gov. George W. Patakis office through the Morgan Post Office at 34th Street.
Anthrax cannot be transmitted from person to person, but spores, whether inhaled or touched, can prove fatal if a person fails to get appropriate medical attention.
As CDC doctors descended on New York City to handle the perplexing crisis, Municipal employees again were called on to go above and beyond the call of duty, said Mark Rosenthal, president of Local 983, which represents the MVOs. Not one member refused, he added. They responded willingly, out of a sense of patriotic duty.
The MVOs drove the sealed samples from stricken sites to Health Dept. labs, to airports and straight to Albany, where sophisticated laboratories yielded test results overnight. On 24-hour call, many of the drivers worked 30-50 overtime hours in the weeks that followed. Management and labor responded with tremendous teamwork to protect millions from a potentially deadly situation, Ponce said.
From the commissioner to the newest hire, everyone was dedicated to helping out, he said. And if we are called on, we will do it again no question.
Bioterror lab team

Research Scientists Dr. Sally Beatrice, standing left, and Dr. Mike Heller, seated, led the Department of Health team that responded to the anthrax terrorist attacks in New York City. Over several weeks, the workers tested thousands of specimens of suspected anthrax. Three years ago, Ms. Beatrice and Mr. Heller worked on an anti-terrorist citywide task force to prepare for incidents like the anthrax attack.
By GREGORY N. HEIRES
A few years ago, Research Scientist Dr. Sally Beatrice and Dr. Mike Heller helped set up a plan to prepare New York City for bioterrorism. So, when the anthrax attacks came, they thought they and their colleagues were ready.
More than 75 Health Dept. staffers, including Research Scientists and Chemists in Local 375, anchored the citys front-line defenses. Despite all the planning, Dr. Beatrice said she and her colleagues were stunned by the enormity and vast scope of the anthrax attack that followed the Sept. 11 terrorist strike on the World Trade Center.
The crisis hit in October, when letters vectored the deadly spores to local media and postal workers in October. But the response actually began three years ago, when a cadre of Health Dept. professionals started drafting a blueprint for coping with a bioterrorist incident.
On the citywide Chemical and Bioterrorism Task Force, they worked closely with federal law enforcement and disease control experts.
Facilities and staff had to be ready. The team helped set up a bioterrorism lab at a Health Dept. site. Dr. Beatrice and Research Scientists Dr. Mike Heller and Dr. George Williams ran a training program for employees.
Anthrax is an acute infectious disease, which can be fatal without speedy treatment. It infects humans through skin contact, ingestion or inhalation of spores.
When the first cases were discovered, they embarked on what Ruth Katz, president of Local 375s Dept. of Health Chapter 10, called a wild ride of high drama and long hours.
Testing lab expands to fight anthrax
Their lab tested the spores that were mailed to the offices of NBC and CBS. Almost overnight, they expanded to meet the need and set up a system for tracking samples delivered by police and public health workers.
We went from one lab with three people to seven labs and two special high-containment and high-security areas, Dr. Beatrice said. As potential cases soared from nearly none to 120 a day, they cultured thousands of possible anthrax specimens over several weeks.
Dr. Hellers role has involved overseeing technicians doing the lab studies, ensuring that conditions were safe on the job, and working closely with Dr. Beatrice and federal officials to make sure the emergency response plan ran smoothly.
Dr. Heller, who is the departments director of toxicology and general toxicology and environmental sciences, was on the scene at 3 a.m. Oct. 21 when New Yorks first specimen was tested and turned out to be sugar.
That first night, I wasnt so worried about my personal safety, because we were wearing protective suits, and we knew you can be treated with antibiotics if youre exposed to anthrax, he said. What we were concerned about was whether the procedures we set up would prevent contamination of the facility. But everything worked out.
When we watched those buildings come down, we felt powerless, said Dr. Beatrice, who is director of retrovirology and immunobiology at the Dept. of Health. When the anthrax hit, we felt we could make a difference.