
9
HEROISM AND HORROR
Emergency response is a product of preparedness. On the
morning of September 11, 2001, the last best hope for the community of
people working in or visiting the World Trade Center rested not with
national policymakers but with private firms and local public servants,
especially the first responders: fire, police, emergency medical service,
and building safety professionals.
Building Preparedness The World Trade Center.
The World Trade Center (WTC) complex was built for the Port Authority of
New York and New Jersey. Construction began in 1966, and tenants began to
occupy its space in 1970.The Twin Towers came to occupy a unique and
symbolic place in the culture of New York City and America.
The WTC actually consisted of seven buildings, including
one hotel, spread across 16 acres of land. The buildings were connected by
an underground mall (the concourse).The Twin Towers (1 WTC, or the North
Tower, and 2 WTC, or the South Tower) were the signature structures,
containing 10.4 million square feet of office space. Both towers had 110
stories, were about 1,350 feet high, and were square; each wall measured
208 feet in length. On any given workday, up to 50,000 office workers
occupied the towers, and 40,000 people passed through the complex.1
Each tower contained three central stairwells, which ran
essentially from top to bottom, and 99 elevators. Generally, elevators
originating in the lobby ran to "sky lobbies" on higher floors, where
additional elevators carried passengers to the tops of the buildings.2
Stairwells A and C ran from the 110th floor to the
raised mezzanine level of the lobby. Stairwell B ran from the 107th floor
to level B6, six floors below ground, and was accessible from the West
Street lobby level, which was one

The World Trade Center Complex as of 9/11
Rendering by Marco Crupi
floor below the mezzanine. All three stairwells ran
essentially straight up and down, except for two deviations in stairwells
A and C where the staircase jutted out toward the perimeter of the
building. On the upper and lower boundaries of these deviations were
transfer hallways contained within the stairwell proper. Each hallway
contained smoke doors to prevent smoke from rising from lower to upper
portions of the building; they were kept closed but not locked. Doors
leading from tenant space into the stairwells were never kept locked;
reentry from the stairwells was generally possible on at least every
fourth floor.3
Doors leading to the roof were locked. There was no
rooftop evacuation plan. The roofs of both the North Tower and the South
Tower were sloped and cluttered surfaces with radiation hazards, making
them impractical for helicopter landings and as staging areas for
civilians. Although the South Tower roof had a helipad, it did not meet
1994 Federal Aviation Administration guidelines.4
The 1993 Terrorist Bombing of the WTC and the
Port Authority's Response. Unlike most of
America, New York City and specifically the World Trade Center had been
the target of terrorist attacks before 9/11.At 12:18 P.M. on February 26,
1993, a 1,500-pound bomb stashed in a rental van was detonated on a
parking garage ramp beneath the Twin Towers. The explosion killed six
people, injured about 1,000 more, and exposed vulnerabilities in the World
Trade Center's and the city's emergency preparedness.5
The towers lost power and communications capability.
Generators had to be shut down to ensure safety, and elevators stopped.
The public-address system and emergency lighting systems failed. The unlit
stairwells filled with smoke and were so dark as to be impassable. Rescue
efforts by the Fire Department of New York (FDNY) were hampered by the
inability of its radios to function in buildings as large as the Twin
Towers. The 911 emergency call system was overwhelmed. The general
evacuation of the towers' occupants via the stairwells took more than four
hours.6
Several small groups of people who were physically
unable to descend the stairs were evacuated from the roof of the South
Tower by New York Police Department (NYPD) helicopters. At least one
person was lifted from the North Tower roof by the NYPD in a dangerous
helicopter rappel operation- 15 hours after the bombing. General knowledge
that these air rescues had occurred appears to have left a number of
civilians who worked in the Twin Towers with the false impression that
helicopter rescues were part of the WTC evacuation plan and that rescue
from the roof was a viable, if not favored, option for those who worked on
upper floors. Although they were considered after 1993, helicopter
evacuations in fact were not incorporated into the WTC fire safety plan.7
To address the problems encountered during the response
to the 1993 bombing, the Port Authority spent an initial $100 million to
make physical, structural, and technological improvements to the WTC, as
well as to enhance its fire safety plan and reorganize and bolster its
fire safety and security staffs.8
Substantial enhancements were made to power sources and
exits. Fluorescent signs and markings were added in and near stairwells.
The Port Authority also installed a sophisticated computerized fire alarm
system with redundant electronics and control panels, and state-of-the-art
fire command stations were placed in the lobby of each tower.9
To manage fire emergency preparedness and operations,
the Port Authority created the dedicated position of fire safety director.
The director supervised a team of deputy fire safety directors, one of
whom was on duty at the fire command station in the lobby of each tower at
all times. He or she would be responsible for communicating with building
occupants during an emergency.10
The Port Authority also sought to prepare civilians
better for future emergencies. Deputy fire safety directors conducted fire
drills at least twice a year, with advance notice to tenants. "Fire safety
teams" were selected from among civilian employees on each floor and
consisted of a fire warden, deputy fire wardens, and searchers. The
standard procedure for fire drills was for fire wardens to lead co-workers
in their respective areas to the center of the floor, where they would use
the emergency intercom phone to obtain specific information on how to
proceed. Some civilians have told us that their evacuation on September 11
was greatly aided by changes and training implemented by the Port
Authority in response to the 1993 bombing.11
But during these drills, civilians were not directed
into the stairwells, or provided with information about their
configuration and about the existence of transfer hallways and smoke
doors. Neither full nor partial evacuation drills were held. Moreover,
participation in drills that were held varied greatly from tenant to
tenant. In general, civilians were never told not to evacuate up. The
standard fire drill announcement advised participants that in the event of
an actual emergency, they would be directed to descend to at least three
floors below the fire. Most civilians recall simply being taught to await
the instructions that would be provided at the time of an emergency.
Civilians were not informed that rooftop evacuations were not part of the
evacuation plan, or that doors to the roof were kept locked. The Port
Authority acknowledges that it had no protocol for rescuing people trapped
above a fire in the towers.12
Six weeks before the September 11 attacks, control of
the WTC was transferred by net lease to a private developer, Silverstein
Properties. Select Port Authority employees were designated to assist with
the transition. Others remained on-site but were no longer part of the
official chain of command. However, on September 11, most Port Authority
World Trade Department employees-including those not on the designated
"transition team"- reported to their regular stations to provide
assistance throughout the morn-ing. Although Silverstein Properties was in
charge of the WTC on September 11, the WTC fire safety plan remained
essentially the same.13
Preparedness of First Responders
On 9/11, the principal first responders were from the
Fire Department of New York, the New York Police Department, the Port
Authority Police Department (PAPD), and the Mayor's Office of Emergency
Management (OEM).
Port Authority Police Department.
On September 11, 2001, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
Police Department consisted of 1,331 officers, many of whom were trained
in fire suppression methods as well as in law enforcement. The PAPD was
led by a superintendent. There was a separate PAPD command for each of the
Port Authority's nine facilities, including the World Trade Center.14
Most Port Authority police commands used
ultra-high-frequency radios. Although all the radios were capable of using
more than one channel, most PAPD officers used one local channel. The
local channels were low-wattage and worked only in the immediate vicinity
of that command. The PAPD also had an agencywide channel, but not all
commands could access it.15
As of September 11, the Port Authority lacked any
standard operating procedures to govern how officers from multiple
commands would respond to and then be staged and utilized at a major
incident at the WTC. In particular, there were no standard operating
procedures covering how different commands should communicate via radio
during such an incident.
The New York Police Department.
The 40,000-officer NYPD was headed by a police commissioner, whose duties
were not primarily operational but who retained operational authority.
Much of the NYPD's operational activities were run by the chief of
department. In the event of a major emergency, a leading role would be
played by the Special Operations Division. This division included the
Aviation Unit, which provided helicopters for surveys and rescues, and the
Emergency Service Unit (ESU), which carried out specialized rescue
missions. The NYPD had specific and detailed standard operating procedures
for the dispatch of officers to an incident, depending on the incident's
magnitude.16
The NYPD precincts were divided into 35 different radio
zones, with a central radio dispatcher assigned to each. In addition,
there were several radio channels for citywide operations. Officers had
portable radios with 20 or more available channels, so that the user could
respond outside his or her precinct. ESU teams also had these channels but
at an operation would use a separate point-to-point channel (which was not
monitored by a dispatcher).17
The NYPD also supervised the city's 911 emergency call
system. Its approximately 1,200 operators, radio dispatchers, and
supervisors were civilian employees of the NYPD. They were trained in the
rudiments of emergency response. When a 911 call concerned a fire, it was
transferred to FDNY dispatch.18
The Fire Department of New York.
The 11,000-member FDNY was headed by a fire commissioner who, unlike the
police commissioner, lacked operational authority. Operations were headed
by the chief of department- the sole five-star chief.19
The FDNY was organized in nine separate geographic
divisions. Each division was further divided into between four to seven
battalions. Each battalion contained typically between three and four
engine companies and two to four ladder companies. In total, the FDNY had
205 engine companies and 133 ladder companies. On-duty ladder companies
consisted of a captain or lieutenant and five firefighters; on-duty engine
companies consisted of a captain or lieutenant and normally four
firefighters. Ladder companies' primary function was to conduct rescues;
engine companies focused on extinguishing fires.20
The FDNY's Specialized Operations Command (SOC)
contained a limited number of units that were of particular importance in
responding to a terrorist attack or other major incident. The department's
five rescue companies and seven squad companies performed specialized and
highly risky rescue operations.21
The logistics of fire operations were directed by Fire
Dispatch Operations Division, which had a center in each of the five
boroughs. All 911 calls concerning fire emergencies were transferred to
FDNY dispatch.22
As of September 11, FDNY companies and chiefs responding
to a fire used analog, point-to-point radios that had six normal operating
channels. Typically, the companies would operate on the same tactical
channel, which chiefs on the scene would monitor and use to communicate
with the firefighters. Chiefs at a fire operation also would use a
separate command channel. Because these point-to-point radios had weak
signal strength, communications on them could be heard only by other FDNY
personnel in the immediate vicinity. In addition, the FDNY had a dispatch
frequency for each of the five boroughs; these were not point-to-point
channels and could be monitored from around the city.23
The FDNY's radios performed poorly during the 1993 WTC
bombing for two reasons. First, the radios signals often did not succeed
in penetrating the numerous steel and concrete floors that separated
companies attempting to communicate; and second, so many different
companies were attempting to use the same point-to-point channel that
communications became unintelligible.24
The Port Authority installed, at its own expense, a
repeater system in 1994 to greatly enhance FDNY radio communications in
the difficult high-rise environment of the Twin Towers. The Port Authority
recommended leaving the repeater system on at all times. The FDNY
requested, however, that the repeater be turned on only when it was
actually needed because the channel could cause interference with other
FDNY operations in Lower Manhattan. The repeater system was installed at
the Port Authority police desk in 5 WTC, to be activated by members of the
Port Authority police when the FDNY units responding to the WTC complex so
requested. However, in the spring of 2000 the FDNY asked that an
activation console for the repeater system be placed instead in the lobby
fire safety desk of each of the towers, making FDNY personnel entirely
responsible for its activation. The Port Authority complied.25
Between 1998 and 2000, fewer people died from fires in
New York City than in any three-year period since accurate measurements
began in 1946.Fire-fighter deaths-a total of 22 during the 1990s-compared
favorably with the most tranquil periods in the department's history.26
Office of Emergency Management and Interagency
Preparedness. In 1996, Mayor Rudolph
Giuliani created the Mayor's Office of Emergency Management, which had
three basic functions. First, OEM's Watch Command was to monitor the
city's key communications channels-including radio frequencies of FDNY
dispatch and the NYPD-and other data. A second purpose of the OEM was to
improve New York City's response to major incidents, including terrorist
attacks, by planning and conducting exercises and drills that would
involve multiple city agencies, particularly the NYPD and FDNY. Third, the
OEM would play a crucial role in managing the city's overall response to
an

The World Trade Center Radio Repeater System
Rendering by Marco Crupi
incident. After OEM's Emergency Operations Center was
activated, designated liaisons from relevant agencies, as well as the
mayor and his or her senior staff, would respond there. In addition, an
OEM field responder would be sent to the scene to ensure that the response
was coordinated.27
The OEM's headquarters was located at 7 WTC. Some
questioned locating it both so close to a previous terrorist target and on
the 23rd floor of a building (difficult to access should elevators become
inoperable). There was no backup site.28
In July 2001, Mayor Giuliani updated a directive titled
"Direction and Control of Emergencies in the City of New York." Its
purpose was to eliminate "potential conflict among responding agencies
which may have areas of overlapping expertise and responsibility." The
directive sought to accomplish this objective by designating, for
different types of emergencies, an appropriate agency as "Incident
Commander." This Incident Commander would be "responsible for the
management of the City's response to the emergency," while the OEM was
"designated the 'On Scene Interagency Coordinator.'"29
Nevertheless, the FDNY and NYPD each considered itself
operationally autonomous. As of September 11, they were not prepared to
comprehensively coordinate their efforts in responding to a major
incident. The OEM had not overcome this problem.
As we turn to the events of September 11, we are mindful
of the unfair perspective afforded by hindsight. Nevertheless, we will try
to describe what happened in the following 102 minutes:
- the 17 minutes from the crash of the hijacked
American Airlines Flight 11 into 1 World Trade Center (the North Tower)
at 8:46 until the South Tower was hit
- the 56 minutes from the crash of the hijacked United
Airlines Flight 175 into 2 World Trade Center (the South Tower) at 9:03
until the collapse of the South Tower
- the 29 minutes from the collapse of the South Tower
at 9:59 until the collapse of the North Tower at 10:28
From 8:46 until 9:03 A.M.
At 8:46:40, the hijacked American Airlines Flight 11 flew into the upper
portion of the North Tower, cutting through floors 93 to 99. Evidence
suggests that all three of the building's stairwells became impassable
from the 92nd floor up. Hundreds of civilians were killed instantly by the
impact. Hundreds more remained alive but trapped.30
Civilians, Fire Safety Personnel, and 911 Calls
North Tower. A jet fuel fireball erupted
upon impact and shot down at least one bank of elevators. The fireball
exploded onto numerous lower floors, including the 77th and 22nd; the West
Street lobby level; and the B4 level, four stories below ground. The
burning jet fuel immediately created thick, black smoke that enveloped the
upper floors and roof of the North Tower. The roof of the South Tower was
also engulfed in smoke because of prevailing light winds from the
northwest.31
Within minutes, New York City's 911 system was flooded
with eyewitness accounts of the event. Most callers correctly identified
the target of the attack. Some identified the plane as a commercial
airliner.32
The first response came from private firms and
individuals-the people and companies in the building. Everything that
would happen to them during the next few minutes would turn on their
circumstances and their preparedness, assisted by building personnel
on-site.
Hundreds of civilians trapped on or above the 92nd floor
gathered in large and small groups, primarily between the 103rd and 106th
floors. A large group was reported on the 92nd floor, technically below
the impact but unable to descend. Civilians were also trapped in
elevators. Other civilians below the impact zone-mostly on floors in the
70s and 80s, but also on at least the 47th and 22nd floors-were either
trapped or waiting for assistance.33
It is unclear when the first full building evacuation
order was attempted over the public-address system. The deputy fire safety
director in the lobby, while immediately aware that a major incident had
occurred, did not know for approximately ten minutes that a commercial jet
had directly hit the building. Following protocol, he initially gave
announcements to those floors that had generated computerized alarms,
advising those tenants to descend to points of safety-at least two floors
below the smoke or fire-and to wait there for further instructions. The
deputy fire safety director has told us that he began instructing a full
evacuation within about ten minutes of the explosion. But the first FDNY
chiefs to arrive in the lobby were advised by the Port Authority fire
safety director-who had reported to the lobby although he was no longer
the designated fire safety director-that the full building evacuation
announcement had been made within one minute of the building being hit.34
Because of damage to building systems caused by the
impact of the plane, public-address announcements were not heard in many
locations. For the same reason, many civilians may have been unable to use
the emergency intercom phones, as they had been advised to do in fire
drills. Many called 911.35
The 911 system was not equipped to handle the enormous
volume of calls it received. Some callers were unable to connect with 911
operators, receiving an "all circuits busy" message. Standard operating
procedure was for calls relating to fire emergencies to be transferred
from 911 operators to FDNY dispatch operators in the appropriate borough
(in this case, Manhattan).Transfers were often plagued by delays and were
in some cases unsuccessful. Many calls were also prematurely disconnected.36
The 911 operators and FDNY dispatchers had no
information about either the location or the magnitude of the impact zone
and were therefore unable to provide information as fundamental as whether
callers were above or below the fire. Because the operators were not
informed of NYPD Aviation's determination of the impossibility of rooftop
rescues from the Twin Towers on that day, they could not knowledgeably
answer when callers asked whether to go up or down. In most instances,
therefore, the operators and the FDNY dispatchers relied on standard
operating procedures for high-rise fires-that civilians should stay low,
remain where they are, and wait for emergency personnel to reach them.
This advice was given to callers from the North Tower for locations both
above and below the impact zone. Fire chiefs told us that the evacuation
of tens of thousands of people from skyscrapers can create many new
problems, especially for individuals who are disabled or in poor health.
Many of the injuries after the 1993 bombing occurred during the
evacuation.37
Although the guidance to stay in place may seem
understandable in cases of conventional high-rise fires, FDNY chiefs in
the North Tower lobby determined at once that all building occupants
should attempt to evacuate immediately. By 8:57, FDNY chiefs had
instructed the PAPD and building personnel to evacuate the South Tower as
well, because of the magnitude of the damage caused by the first plane's
impact.38
These critical decisions were not conveyed to 911
operators or to FDNY dispatchers. Departing from protocol, a number of
operators told callers that they could break windows, and several
operators advised callers to evacuate if they could.39
Civilians who called the Port Authority police desk located at 5 WTC were
advised to leave if they could.40
Most civilians who were not obstructed from proceeding
began evacuating without waiting for instructions over the intercom
system. Some remained to wait for help, as advised by 911 operators.
Others simply continued to work or delayed to collect personal items, but
in many cases were urged to leave by others. Some Port Authority civilian
employees remained on various upper floors to help civilians who were
trapped and to assist in the evacuation.41
While evacuating, some civilians had trouble reaching
the exits because of damage caused by the impact. Some were confused by
deviations in the increasingly crowded stairwells, and impeded by doors
that appeared to be locked but actually were jammed by debris or shifting
that resulted from the impact of the plane. Despite these obstacles, the
evacuation was relatively calm and orderly.42
Within ten minutes of impact, smoke was beginning to
rise to the upper floors in debilitating volumes and isolated fires were
reported, although there were some pockets of refuge. Faced with
insufferable heat, smoke, and fire, and with no prospect for relief, some
jumped or fell from the building.43
South Tower. Many
civilians in the South Tower were initially unaware of what had happened
in the other tower. Some believed an incident had occurred in their
building; others were aware that a major explosion had occurred on the
upper floors of the North Tower. Many people decided to leave, and some
were advised to do so by fire wardens. In addition, Morgan Stanley, which
occupied more than 20 floors of the South Tower, evacuated its employees
by the decision of company security officials.44
Consistent with protocol, at 8:49 the deputy fire safety
director in the South Tower told his counterpart in the North Tower that
he would wait to hear from "the boss from the Fire Department or somebody"
before ordering an evacuation.45 At about this time, an
announcement over the public-address system in

The World Trade Center North Tower Stairwell with Deviation
Rendering by Marco Crupi
the South Tower stated that the incident had occurred in
the other building and advised tenants, generally, that their building was
safe and that they should remain on or return to their offices or floors.
A statement from the deputy fire safety director informing tenants that
the incident had occurred in the other building was consistent with
protocol; the expanded advice did not correspond to any existing written
protocol, and did not reflect any instruction known to have been given to
the deputy fire safety director that day. We do not know the reason for
the announcement, as both the deputy fire safety director believed to have
made it and the director of fire safety for the WTC complex perished in
the South Tower's collapse. Clearly, however, the prospect of another
plane hitting the second building was beyond the contemplation of anyone
giving advice. According to one of the first fire chiefs to arrive, such a
scenario was unimaginable, "beyond our consciousness." As a result of the
announcement, many civilians remained on their floors. Others reversed
their evacuation and went back up.46
Similar advice was given in person by security officials
in both the ground-floor lobby-where a group of 20 that had descended by
the elevators was personally instructed to go back upstairs-and in the
upper sky lobby, where many waited for express elevators to take them
down. Security officials who gave this advice were not part of the fire
safety staff.47
Several South Tower occupants called the Port Authority
police desk in 5 WTC. Some were advised to stand by for further
instructions; others were strongly advised to leave.48
It is not known whether the order by the FDNY to
evacuate the South Tower was received by the deputy fire safety director
making announcements there. However, at approximately 9:02-less than a
minute before the building was hit-an instruction over the South Tower's
public-address system advised civilians, generally, that they could begin
an orderly evacuation if conditions warranted. Like the earlier advice to
remain in place, it did not correspond to any prewritten emergency
instruction.49
FDNY Initial Response Mobilization.
The FDNY response began within five seconds of the crash. By 9:00, many
senior FDNY leaders, including 7 of the 11 most highly ranked chiefs in
the department, as well as the Commissioner and many of his deputies and
assistants, had begun responding from headquarters in Brooklyn. While en
route over the Brooklyn Bridge, the Chief of Department and the Chief of
Operations had a clear view of the situation on the upper floors of the
North Tower. They determined that because of the fire's magnitude and
location near the top of the building, their mission would be primarily
one of rescue. They called for a fifth alarm, which would bring additional
engine and ladder companies, as well as for two more elite rescue units.
The Chief of Department arrived at about 9:00; general FDNY Incident
Command was transferred to his location on the West Side Highway. In all,
22 of the 32 senior chiefs and commissioners arrived at the WTC before
10:00.50
As of 9:00, the units that were dispatched (including
senior chiefs responding to headquarters) included approximately 235
firefighters. These units consisted of 21 engine companies, nine ladder
companies, four of the department's elite rescue teams, the department's
single Hazmat team, two of the city's elite squad companies, and support
staff. In addition, at 8:53 nine Brooklyn units were staged on the
Brooklyn side of the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel to await possible dispatch
orders.51
Operations. A
battalion chief and two ladder and two engine companies arrived at the
North Tower at approximately 8:52. As they entered the lobby, they
encountered badly burned civilians who had been caught in the path of the
fireball. Floor-to-ceiling windows in the northwest corner of the West
Street level of the lobby had been blown out; some large marble tiles had
been dislodged from the walls; one entire elevator bank was destroyed by
the fireball. Lights were functioning, however, and the air was clear of
smoke.52
As the highest-ranking officer on the scene, the
battalion chief initially was the FDNY incident commander. Minutes later,
the on-duty division chief for Lower Manhattan arrived and took over. Both
chiefs immediately began speaking with the former fire safety director and
other building personnel to learn whether building systems were working.
They were advised that all 99 elevators in the North Tower appeared to be
out, and there were no assurances that sprinklers or standpipes were
working on upper floors. Chiefs also spoke with Port Authority police
personnel and an OEM representative.53
After conferring with the chiefs in the lobby, one
engine and one ladder company began climbing stairwell C at about 8:57,
with the goal of approaching the impact zone as scouting units and
reporting back to the chiefs in the lobby. The radio channel they used was
tactical 1. Following FDNY high-rise fire protocols, other units did not
begin climbing immediately, as the chiefs worked to formulate a plan
before sending them up. Units began mobilizing in the lobby, lining up and
awaiting their marching orders.54
Also by approximately 8:57, FDNY chiefs had asked both
building personnel and a Port Authority police officer to evacuate the
South Tower, because in their judgment the impact of the plane into the
North Tower made the entire complex unsafe-not because of concerns about a
possible second plane.55
The FDNY chiefs in the increasingly crowded North Tower
lobby were confronting critical choices with little to no information.
They had ordered units up the stairs to report back on conditions, but did
not know what the impact floors were; they did not know if any stairwells
into the impact zone were clear; and they did not know whether water for
firefighting would be available on the upper floors. They also did not
know what the fire and impact zone looked like from the outside.56
They did know that the explosion had been large enough
to send down a fireball that blew out elevators and windows in the lobby
and that conditions were so dire that some civilians on upper floors were
jumping or falling from the building. They also knew from building
personnel that some civilians were trapped in elevators and on specific
floors. According to Division Chief for Lower Manhattan Peter Hayden, "We
had a very strong sense we would lose firefighters and that we were in
deep trouble, but we had estimates of 25,000 to 50,000 civilians, and we
had to try to rescue them."57
The chiefs concluded that this would be a rescue
operation, not a firefighting operation. One of the chiefs present
explained:
We realized that, because of the impact of the plane,
that there was some structural damage to the building, and most likely
that the fire suppression systems within the building were probably
damaged and possibly inoperable....We knew that at the height of the day
there were as many as 50,000 people in this building. We had a large
volume of fire on the upper floors. Each floor was approximately an acre
in size. Several floors of fire would have been beyond the
fire-extinguishing capability of the forces that we had on hand. So we
determined, very early on, that this was going to be strictly a rescue
mission. We were going to vacate the building, get everybody out, and then
we were going to get out.58
The specifics of the mission were harder to determine,
as they had almost no information about the situation 80 or more stories
above them. They also received advice from senior FDNY chiefs that while
the building might eventually suffer a partial collapse on upper floors,
such structural failure was not imminent. No one anticipated the
possibility of a total collapse.59
Emergency medical services (EMS) personnel were directed
to one of four triage areas being set up around the perimeter of the WTC.
Some entered the lobby to respond to specific casualty reports. In
addition, many ambulance paramedics from private hospitals were rushing to
the WTC complex.60
NYPD Initial Response
Numerous NYPD officers saw the plane strike the North
Tower and immediately reported it to NYPD communications dispatchers.61
At 8:58, while en route, the NYPD Chief of Department
raised the NYPD's mobilization to level 4, thereby sending to the WTC
approximately 22 lieutenants, 100 sergeants, and 800 police officers from
all over the city. The Chief of Department arrived at Church and Vesey at
9:00.62
At 9:01, the NYPD patrol mobilization point was moved to
West and Vesey in order to handle the greater number of patrol officers
dispatched in the higher-level mobilization. These officers would be
stationed around the perimeter of the complex to direct the evacuation of
civilians. Many were diverted on the way to the scene by intervening
emergencies related to the attack.63
At 8:50, the Aviation Unit of the NYPD dispatched two
helicopters to the WTC to report on conditions and assess the feasibility
of a rooftop landing or of special rescue operations. En route, the two
helicopters communicated with air traffic controllers at the area's three
major airports and informed them of the commercial airplane crash at the
World Trade Center. The air traffic controllers had been unaware of the
incident.64
At 8:56, an NYPD ESU team asked to be picked up at the
Wall Street heliport to initiate rooftop rescues. At 8:58, however, after
assessing the North Tower roof, a helicopter pilot advised the ESU team
that they could not land on the roof, because "it is too engulfed in
flames and heavy smoke condition."65
By 9:00, a third NYPD helicopter was responding to the
WTC complex. NYPD helicopters and ESU officers remained on the scene
throughout the morning, prepared to commence rescue operations on the roof
if conditions improved. Both FDNY and NYPD protocols called for FDNY
personnel to be placed in NYPD helicopters in the event of an attempted
rooftop rescue at a high-rise fire. No FDNY personnel were placed in NYPD
helicopters on September 11.66
The 911 operators and FDNY dispatchers were not advised
that rooftop rescues were not being undertaken. They thus were not able to
communicate this fact to callers, some of whom spoke of attempting to
climb to the roof.67
Two on-duty NYPD officers were on the 20th floor of the
North Tower at 8:46.They climbed to the 29th floor, urging civilians to
evacuate, but did not locate a group of civilians trapped on the 22nd
floor.68
Just before 9:00, an ESU team began to walk from Church
and Vesey to the North Tower lobby, with the goal of climbing toward and
setting up a triage center on the upper floors for the severely injured. A
second ESU team would follow them to assist in removing those individuals.69
Numerous officers responded in order to help injured
civilians and to urge those who could walk to vacate the area immediately.
Putting themselves in danger of falling debris, several officers entered
the plaza and successfully rescued at least one injured, nonambulatory
civilian, and attempted to rescue others.70
Also by about 9:00, transit officers began shutting down
subway stations in the vicinity of the World Trade Center and evacuating
civilians from those stations.71
Around the city, the NYPD cleared major thoroughfares
for emergency vehicles to access the WTC. The NYPD and PAPD coordinated
the closing of bridges and tunnels into Manhattan.72
PAPD Initial Response
The Port Authority's on-site commanding police officer
was standing in the concourse when a fireball erupted out of elevator
shafts and exploded onto the mall concourse, causing him to dive for
cover. The on-duty sergeant initially instructed the officers in the WTC
Command to meet at the police desk in 5 WTC. Soon thereafter, he
instructed officers arriving from outside commands to meet him at the fire
safety desk in the North Tower lobby. A few of these officers from outside
commands were given WTC Command radios.73
One Port Authority police officer at the WTC immediately
began climbing stairwell C in the North Tower.74 Other officers
began performing rescue and evacuation operations on the ground floors and
in the PATH (Port Authority Trans-Hudson) station below the WTC complex.
Within minutes of impact, Port Authority police officers
from the PATH, bridges, tunnels, and airport commands began responding to
the WTC. The PAPD lacked written standard operating procedures for
personnel responding from outside commands to the WTC during a major
incident. In addition, officers from some PAPD commands lacked
interoperable radio frequencies. As a result, there was no comprehensive
coordination of PAPD's overall response.75
At 9:00, the PAPD commanding officer of the WTC ordered
an evacuation of all civilians in the World Trade Center complex, because
of the magnitude of the calamity in the North Tower. This order was given
over WTC police radio channel W, which could not be heard by the deputy
fire safety director in the South Tower.76
Also at 9:00, the PAPD Superintendent and Chief of
Department arrived separately and made their way to the North Tower.77
OEM Initial Response
By 8:48, officials in OEM headquarters on the 23rd floor
of 7 WTC-just to the north of the North Tower-began to activate the
Emergency Operations Center by calling such agencies as the FDNY, NYPD,
Department of Health, and the Greater Hospital Association and instructing
them to send their designated representatives to the OEM. In addition, the
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) was called and asked to send at
least five federal Urban Search and Rescue Teams (such teams are located
throughout the United States). At approximately 8:50, a senior
representative from the OEM arrived in the lobby of the North Tower and
began to act as the OEM field responder to the incident. He soon was
joined by several other OEM officials, including the OEM Director.78
Summary
In the 17-minute period between 8:46 and 9:03 A.M. on
September 11, New York City and the Port Authority of New York and New
Jersey had mobilized the largest rescue operation in the city's history.
Well over a thousand first responders had been deployed, an evacuation had
begun, and the critical decision that the fire could not be fought had
been made.
Then the second plane hit.
From 9:03 until 9:59 A.M.
At 9:03:11, the hijacked United Airlines Flight 175 hit
2 WTC (the South Tower) from the south, crashing through the 77th to 85th
floors. What had been the largest and most complicated rescue operation in
city history instantly doubled in magnitude. The plane banked as it hit
the building, leaving portions of the building undamaged on impact floors.
As a consequence-and in contrast to the situation in the North Tower-one
of the stairwells (A) initially remained passable from at least the 91st
floor down, and likely from top to bottom.79
Civilians, Fire Safety Personnel, and 911 Calls
South Tower. At the lower end of the
impact, the 78th-floor sky lobby, hundreds had been waiting to evacuate
when the plane hit. Many had attempted but failed to squeeze into packed
express elevators. Upon impact, many were killed or severely injured;
others were relatively unharmed. We know of at least one civilian who
seized the initiative and shouted that anyone who could walk should walk
to the stairs, and anyone who could help should help others in need of
assistance. As a result, at least two small groups of civilians descended
from that floor. Others remained on the floor to help the injured and move
victims who were unable to walk to the stairwell to aid their rescue.80
Still others remained alive in the impact zone above the
78th floor. Damage was extensive, and conditions were highly precarious.
The only survivor known to have escaped from the heart of the impact zone
described the 81st floor-where the wing of the plane had sliced through
his office-as a "demolition" site in which everything was "broken up" and
the smell of jet fuel was so strong that it was almost impossible to
breathe. This person escaped by means of an unlikely rescue, aided by a
civilian fire warden descending from a higher floor, who, critically, had
been provided with a flashlight.81
At least four people were able to descend stairwell A
from the 81st floor or above. One left the 84th floor immediately after
the building was hit. Even at that point, the stairway was dark, smoky,
and difficult to navigate; glow strips on the stairs and handrails were a
significant help. Several flights down, however, the evacuee became
confused when he reached a smoke door that caused him to believe the
stairway had ended. He was able to exit that stairwell and switch to
another.82
Many civilians in and above the impact zone ascended the
stairs. One small group reversed its descent down stairwell A after being
advised by another civilian that they were approaching a floor "in
flames." The only known survivor has told us that their intention was to
exit the stairwell in search of clearer air. At the 91st floor, joined by
others from intervening floors, they perceived themselves to be trapped in
the stairwell and began descending again. By this time, the stairwell was
"pretty black," intensifying smoke caused many to pass out, and fire had
ignited in the 82nd-floor transfer hallway.83
Others ascended to attempt to reach the roof but were
thwarted by locked doors. At approximately 9:30 a "lock release"
order-which would unlock all areas in the complex controlled by the
buildings' computerized security system, including doors leading to the
roofs-was transmitted to the Security Command Center located on the 22nd
floor of the North Tower. Damage to the software controlling the system,
resulting from the impact of the plane, prevented this order from being
executed.84
Others, attempting to descend, were frustrated by jammed
or locked doors in stairwells or confused by the structure of the
stairwell deviations. By the lower 70s, however, stairwells A and B were
well-lit, and conditions were generally normal.85
Some civilians remained on affected floors, and at least
one ascended from a lower point into the impact zone, to help evacuate
colleagues or assist the injured.86
Within 15 minutes after the impact, debilitating smoke
had reached at least one location on the 100th floor, and severe smoke
conditions were reported throughout floors in the 90s and 100s over the
course of the following half hour. By 9:30, a number of civilians who had
failed to reach the roof remained on the 105th floor, likely unable to
descend because of intensifying smoke in the stairwell. There were reports
of tremendous smoke on that floor, but at least one area remained less
affected until shortly before the building collapsed. There were several
areas between the impact zone and the uppermost floors where conditions
were better. At least a hundred people remained alive on the 88th and 89th
floors, in some cases calling 911 for direction.87
The 911 system remained plagued by the operators' lack
of awareness of what was occurring. Just as in the North Tower, callers
from below and above the impact zone were advised to remain where they
were and wait for help. The operators were not given any information about
the inability to conduct rooftop rescues and therefore could not advise
callers that they had essentially been ruled out. This lack of
information, combined with the general advice to remain where they were,
may have caused civilians above the impact not to attempt to descend,
although stairwell A may have been passable.88
In addition, the 911 system struggled with the volume of
calls and rigid standard operating procedures according to which calls
conveying crucial information had to wait to be transferred to either EMS
or FDNY dispatch.89 According to one civilian who was
evacuating down stairwell A from the heart of the impact zone and who
stopped on the 31st floor in order to call 911, I told them when they
answered the phone, where I was, that I had passed somebody on the 44th
floor, injured-they need to get a medic and a stretcher to this floor, and
described the situation in brief, and the person then asked for my phone
number, or something, and they said-they put me on hold. "You gotta talk
to one of my supervisors"-and suddenly I was on hold. And so I waited a
considerable amount of time. Somebody else came back on the phone, I
repeated the story. And then it happened again. I was on hold a second
time, and needed to repeat the story for a third time. But I told the
third person that I am only telling you once. I am getting out of the
building, here are the details, write it down, and do what you should do.90
Very few 911 calls were received from floors below the
impact, but at least one person was advised to remain on the 73rd floor
despite the caller's protests that oxygen was running out. The last known
911 call from this location came at 9:52.91
Evidence suggests that the public-address system did not
continue to function after the building was hit. A group of people trapped
on the 97th floor, however, made repeated references in calls to 911 to
having heard "announcements" to go down the stairs. Evacuation tones were
heard in locations both above and below the impact zone.92
By 9:35, the West Street lobby level of the South Tower
was becoming overwhelmed by injured people who had descended to the lobby
but were having difficulty going on. Those who could continue were
directed to exit north or east through the concourse and then out of the
WTC complex.93
By 9:59, at least one person had descended from as high
as the 91st floor of that tower, and stairwell A was reported to have been
almost empty. Stairwell B was also reported to have contained only a
handful of descending civilians at an earlier point in the morning. But
just before the tower collapsed, a team of NYPD ESU officers encountered a
stream of civilians descending an unidentified stairwell in the 20s.These
civilians may have been descending from at or above the impact zone.94
North Tower. In
the North Tower, civilians continued their evacuation. On the 91st floor,
the highest floor with stairway access, all civilians but one were
uninjured and able to descend. While some complained of smoke, heat,
fumes, and crowding in the stairwells, conditions were otherwise fairly
normal on floors below the impact. At least one stairwell was reported to
have been "clear and bright" from the upper 80s down.95
Those who called 911 from floors below the impact were
generally advised to remain in place. One group trapped on the 83rd floor
pleaded repeatedly to know whether the fire was above or below them,
specifically asking if 911 operators had any information from the outside
or from the news. The callers were transferred back and forth several
times and advised to stay put. Evidence suggests that these callers died.96
At 8:59, the Port Authority police desk at Newark
Airport told a third party that a group of Port Authority civilian
employees on the 64th floor should evacuate. (The third party was not at
the WTC, but had been in phone contact with the group on the 64th floor.)
At 9:10, in response to an inquiry from the employees themselves, the Port
Authority police desk in Jersey City confirmed that employees on the 64th
floor should "be careful, stay near the stairwells, and wait for the
police to come up." When the third party inquired again at 9:31, the
police desk at Newark Airport advised that they "absolutely" evacuate. The
third party informed the police desk that the employees had previously
received contrary advice from the FDNY, which could only have come via
911. These workers were not trapped, yet unlike most occupants on the
upper floors, they had chosen not to descend immediately after impact.
They eventually began to descend the stairs, but most of them died in the
collapse of the North Tower.97
All civilians who reached the lobby were directed by
NYPD and PAPD officers into the concourse, where other police officers
guided them to exit the concourse and complex to the north and east so
that they might avoid falling debris and victims.98
By 9:55, only a few civilians were descending above the
25th floor in stairwell B; these primarily were injured, handicapped,
elderly, or severely overweight civilians, in some cases being assisted by
other civilians.99
By 9:59, tenants from the 91st floor had already
descended the stairs and exited the concourse. However, a number of
civilians remained in at least stairwell C, approaching lower floors.
Other evacuees were killed earlier by debris falling on the street.100
FDNY Response Increased Mobilization.
Immediately after the second plane hit, the FDNY Chief of Department
called a second fifth alarm.101
By 9:15, the number of FDNY personnel en route to or
present at the scene was far greater than the commanding chiefs at the
scene had requested. Five factors account for this disparity. First, while
the second fifth alarm had called for 20 engine and 8 ladder companies, in
fact 23 engine and 13 ladder companies were dispatched. Second, several
other units self-dispatched. Third, because the attacks came so close to
the 9:00 shift change, many firefighters just going off duty were given
permission by company officers to "ride heavy" and became part of those
on-duty teams, under the leadership of that unit's officer. Fourth, many
off-duty firefighters responded from firehouses separately from the
on-duty unit (in some cases when expressly told not to) or from home. The
arrival of personnel in excess of that dispatched was particularly
pronounced in the department's elite units. Fifth, numerous additional
FDNY personnel-such as fire marshals and firefighters in administrative
positions-who lacked a predetermined operating role also reported to the
WTC.102
The Repeater System.
Almost immediately after the South Tower was hit, senior FDNY chiefs in
the North Tower lobby huddled to discuss strategy for the operations in
the two towers. Of particular concern to the chiefs-in light of FDNY
difficulties in responding to the 1993 bombing-was communications
capability. One of the chiefs recommended testing the repeater channel to
see if it would work.103
Earlier, an FDNY chief had asked building personnel to
activate the repeater channel, which would enable greatly-enhanced FDNY
portable radio communications in the high-rises. One button on the
repeater system activation console in the North Tower was pressed at 8:54,
though it is unclear by whom. As a result of this activation,
communication became possible between FDNY portable radios on the repeater
channel. In addition, the repeater's master handset at the fire safety
desk could hear communications made by FDNY portable radios on the
repeater channel. The activation of transmission on the master
handset required, however, that a second button be pressed. That second
button was never activated on the morning of September 11.104
At 9:05, FDNY chiefs tested the WTC complex's repeater
system. Because the second button had not been activated, the chief on the
master handset could not transmit. He was also apparently unable to hear
another chief who was attempting to communicate with him from a portable
radio, either because of a technical problem or because the volume was
turned down on the console (the normal setting when the system was not in
use). Because the repeater channel seemed inoperable-the master handset
appeared unable to transmit or receive communications-the chiefs in the
North Tower lobby decided not to use it.The repeater system was working at
least partially, however, on portable FDNY radios, and firefighters
subsequently used repeater channel 7 in the South Tower.105
FDNY North Tower Operations.
Command and control decisions were affected by the lack of knowledge of
what was happening 30, 60, 90, and 100 floors above. According to one of
the chiefs in the lobby, "One of the most critical things in a major
operation like this is to have information. We didn't have a lot of
information coming in.We didn't receive any reports of what was seen from
the [NYPD] helicopters. It was impossible to know how much damage was done
on the upper floors, whether the stairwells were intact or not."106
According to another chief present, "People watching on TV certainly had
more knowledge of what was happening a hundred floors above us than we did
in the lobby.... [W]ithout critical information coming in . . . it's very
difficult to make informed, critical decisions[.]"107
As a result, chiefs in the lobby disagreed over whether
anyone at or above the impact zone possibly could be rescued, or whether
there should be even limited firefighting for the purpose of cutting exit
routes through fire zones.108
Many units were simply instructed to ascend toward the
impact zone and report back to the lobby via radio. Some units were
directed to assist specific groups of individuals trapped in elevators or
in offices well below the impact zone. One FDNY company successfully
rescued some civilians who were trapped on the 22nd floor as a result of
damage caused by the initial fireball.109
An attempt was made to track responding units'
assignments on a magnetic board, but the number of units and individual
firefighters arriving in the lobby made this an overwhelming task. As the
fire companies were not advised to the contrary, they followed protocol
and kept their radios on tactical channel 1, which would be monitored by
the chiefs in the lobby. Those battalion chiefs who would climb would
operate on a separate command channel, which also would be monitored by
the chiefs in the lobby.110
Fire companies began to ascend stairwell B at
approximately 9:07, laden with about 100 pounds of heavy protective
clothing, self-contained breathing apparatuses, and other equipment
(including hoses for engine companies and heavy tools for ladder
companies).111
Firefighters found the stairways they entered intact,
lit, and clear of smoke. Unbeknownst to the lobby command post, one
battalion chief in the North Tower found a working elevator, which he took
to the 16th floor before beginning to climb.112
In ascending stairwell B, firefighters were passing a
steady and heavy stream of descending civilians. Firemen were impressed
with the composure and total lack of panic shown by almost all civilians.
Many civilians were in awe of the firefighters and found their mere
presence to be calming.113
Firefighters periodically stopped on particular floors
and searched to ensure that no civilians were still on it. In a few
instances healthy civilians were found on floors, either because they
still were collecting personal items or for no apparent reason; they were
told to evacuate immediately. Firefighters deputized healthy civilians to
be in charge of others who were struggling or injured.114
Climbing up the stairs with heavy protective clothing
and equipment was hard work even for physically fit firefighters. As
firefighters began to suffer varying levels of fatigue, some became
separated from others in their unit.115
At 9:32, a senior chief radioed all units in the North
Tower to return to the lobby, either because of a false report of a third
plane approaching or because of his judgment about the deteriorating
condition of the building. Once the rumor of the third plane was debunked,
other chiefs continued operations, and there is no evidence that any units
actually returned to the lobby. At the same time, a chief in the lobby was
asked to consider the possibility of a rooftop rescue but was unable to
reach FDNY dispatch by radio or phone. Out on West Street, however, the
FDNY Chief of Department had already dismissed any rooftop rescue as
impossible.116
As units climbed higher, their ability to communicate
with chiefs on tactical 1 became more limited and sporadic, both because
of the limited effectiveness of FDNY radios in high-rises and because so
many units on tactical 1 were trying to communicate at once. When
attempting to reach a particular unit, chiefs in the lobby often heard
nothing in response.117
Just prior to 10:00, in the North Tower one engine
company had climbed to the 54th floor, at least two other companies of
firefighters had reached the sky lobby on the 44th floor, and numerous
units were located between the 5th and 37th floors.118
FDNY South Tower and Marriott Hotel Operations.
Immediately after the repeater test, a senior chief and a battalion chief
commenced operations in the South Tower lobby. Almost at once they were
joined by an OEM field responder. They were not, however, joined right
away by a sizable number of fire companies, as units that had been in or
en route to the North Tower lobby at 9:03 were not reallocated to the
South Tower.119
A battalion chief and a ladder company found a working
elevator to the 40th floor and from there proceeded to climb stairwell B.
Another ladder company arrived soon thereafter, and began to rescue
civilians trapped in an elevator between the first and second floors. The
senior chief in the lobby expressed frustration about the lack of units he
initially had at his disposal for South Tower operations.120
Unlike the commanders in the North Tower, the senior
chief in the lobby and the ascending battalion chief kept their radios on
repeater channel 7. For the first 15 minutes of the operations,
communications among them and the ladder company climbing with the
battalion chief worked well. Upon learning from a company security
official that the impact zone began at the 78th floor, a ladder company
transmitted this information, and the battalion chief directed an engine
company staged on the 40th floor to attempt to find an elevator to reach
that upper level.121
To our knowledge, no FDNY chiefs outside the South Tower
realized that the repeater channel was functioning and being used by units
in that tower. The senior chief in the South Tower lobby was initially
unable to communicate his requests for more units to chiefs either in the
North Tower lobby or at the outdoor command post.122
From approximately 9:21 on, the ascending battalion
chief was unable to reach the South Tower lobby command post because the
senior chief in the lobby had ceased to communicate on repeater channel 7.
The vast majority of units that entered the South Tower did not
communicate on the repeater channel.123
The first FDNY fatality of the day occurred at
approximately 9:30, when a civilian landed on and killed a fireman near
the intersection of West and Liberty streets.124
By 9:30, chiefs in charge of the South Tower still were
in need of additional companies. Several factors account for the lag in
response. First, only two units that had been dispatched to the North
Tower prior to 9:03 reported immediately to the South Tower. Second, units
were not actually sent until approximately five minutes after the FDNY
Chief of Department ordered their dispatch. Third, those units that had
been ordered at 8:53 to stage at the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel-and thus very
close to the WTC complex-were not dispatched after the plane hit the South
Tower. Fourth, units parked further north on West Street, then proceeded
south on foot and stopped at the overall FDNY command post on West Street,
where in some cases they were told to wait. Fifth, some units responded
directly to the North Tower. (Indeed, radio communications indicated that
in certain cases some firemen believed that the South Tower was 1 WTC when
in fact it was 2 WTC.) Sixth, some units couldn't find the staging area
(at West Street south of Liberty) for the South Tower. Finally, the
jumpers and debris that confronted units attempting to enter the South
Tower from its main entrance on Liberty Street caused some units to search
for indirect ways to enter that tower, most often through the Marriott
Hotel, or simply to remain on West Street.125
A chief at the overall outdoor command post was under
the impression that he was to assist in lobby operations of the South
Tower, and in fact his aide already was in that lobby. But because of his
lack of familiarity with the WTC complex and confusion over how to get to
there, he instead ended up in the Marriott at about 9:35. Here he came
across about 14 units, many of which had been trying to find safe access
to the South Tower. He directed them to secure the elevators and conduct
search-and-rescue operations on the upper floors of the Marriott. Four of
these companies searched the spa on the hotel's top floor-the 22nd
floor-for civilians, and found none.126
Feeling satisfied with the scope of the operation in the
Marriott, the chief in the lobby there directed some units to proceed to
what he thought was the South Tower. In fact, he pointed them to the North
Tower. Three of the FDNY companies who had entered the North Tower from
the Marriott found a working elevator in a bank at the south end of the
lobby, which they took to the 23rd floor.127
In response to the shortage of units in the South Tower,
at 9:37 an additional second alarm was requested by the chief at the West
and Liberty streets staging area. At this time, the units that earlier had
been staged on the Brooklyn side of the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel were
dispatched to the South Tower; some had gone through the tunnel already
and had responded to the Marriott, not the South Tower.128
Between 9:45 and 9:58, the ascending battalion chief
continued to lead FDNY operations on the upper floors of the South Tower.
At 9:50, an FDNY ladder company encountered numerous seriously injured
civilians on the 70th floor. With the assistance of a security guard, at
9:53 a group of civilians trapped in an elevator on the 78th-floor sky
lobby were found by an FDNY company. They were freed from the elevator at
9:58. By that time the battalion chief had reached the 78th floor on
stairwell A; he reported that it looked open to the 79th floor, well into
the impact zone. He also reported numerous civilian fatalities in the
area.129
FDNY Command and Control Outside the Towers.
The overall command post consisted of senior chiefs, commissioners, the
field communications van (Field Comm), numerous units that began to arrive
after the South Tower was hit, and EMS chiefs and personnel.130
Field Comm's two main functions were to relay
information between the overall operations command post and FDNY dispatch
and to track all units operating at the scene on a large magnetic board.
Both of these missions were severely compromised by the magnitude of the
disaster on September 11. First, the means of transmitting information
were unreliable. For example, while FDNY dispatch advised Field Comm that
100 people were reported via 911 to be trapped on the 105th floor of the
North Tower, and Field Comm then attempted to convey that report to chiefs
at the outdoor command post, this information did not reach the North
Tower lobby. Second, Field Comm's ability to keep track of which units
were operating where was limited, because many units reported directly to
the North Tower, the South Tower, or the Marriott. Third, efforts to track
units by listening to tactical 1 were severely hampered by the number of
units using that channel; as many people tried to speak at once, their
transmissions overlapped and often became indecipherable. In the opinion
of one of the members of the Field Comm group, tactical 1 simply was not
designed to handle the number of units operating on it that morning.131
The primary Field Comm van had access to the NYPD's
Special Operations channel (used by NYPD Aviation), but it was in the
garage for repairs on September 11.The backup van lacked that capability.132
The Chief of Department, along with civilian
commissioners and senior EMS chiefs, organized ambulances on West Street
to expedite the transport of injured civilians to hospitals.133
To our knowledge, none of the chiefs present believed
that a total collapse of either tower was possible. One senior chief did
articulate his concern that upper floors could begin to collapse in a few
hours, and that firefighters thus should not ascend above floors in the
60s.That opinion was not conveyed to chiefs in the North Tower lobby, and
there is no evidence that it was conveyed to chiefs in the South Tower
lobby either.134
Although the Chief of Department had general authority
over operations, tactical decisions remained the province of the lobby
commanders. The highest-ranking officer in the North Tower was responsible
for communicating with the Chief of Department. They had two brief
conversations. In the first, the senior lobby chief gave the Chief of
Department a status report and confirmed that this was a rescue, not
firefighting, operation. In the second conversation, at about 9:45, the
Chief of Department suggested that given how the North Tower appeared to
him, the senior lobby chief might want to consider evacuating FDNY
personnel.135
At 9:46, the Chief of Department called an additional
fifth alarm, and at 9:54 an additional 20 engine and 6 ladder companies
were sent to the WTC. As a result, more than one-third of all FDNY
companies now had been dispatched to the WTC. At about 9:57, an EMS
paramedic approached the FDNY Chief of Department and advised that an
engineer in front of 7 WTC had just remarked that the Twin Towers in fact
were in imminent danger of a total collapse.136
NYPD Response
Immediately after the second plane hit, the Chief of
Department of the NYPD ordered a second Level 4 mobilization, bringing the
total number of NYPD officers responding to close to 2,000.137
The NYPD Chief of Department called for Operation Omega,
which required the protection of sensitive locations around the city. NYPD
headquarters were secured and all other government buildings were
evacuated.138
The ESU command post at Church and Vesey streets
coordinated all NYPD ESU rescue teams. After the South Tower was hit, the
ESU officer running this command post decided to send one ESU team (each
with approximately six police officers) up each of the Twin Towers'
stairwells. While he continued to monitor the citywide SOD channel, which
NYPD helicopters were using, he also monitored the point-to-point tactical
channel that the ESU teams climbing in the towers would use.139
The first NYPD ESU team entered the West Street-level
lobby of the North Tower and prepared to begin climbing at about 9:15 A.M.
They attempted to check in with the FDNY chiefs present, but were
rebuffed. OEM personnel did not intervene. The ESU team began to climb the
stairs. Shortly thereafter, a second NYPD ESU team entered the South
Tower. The OEM field responder present ensured that they check in with the
FDNY chief in charge of the lobby, and it was agreed that the ESU team
would ascend and support FDNY personnel.140
A third ESU team subsequently entered the North Tower at
its elevated mezzanine lobby level and made no effort to check in with the
FDNY command post. A fourth ESU team entered the South Tower. By 9:59, a
fifth ESU team was next to 6 WTC and preparing to enter the North Tower.141
By approximately 9:50, the lead ESU team had reached the
31st floor, observing that there appeared to be no more civilians still
descending. This ESU team encountered a large group of firefighters and
administered oxygen to some of them who were exhausted.142
At about 9:56, the officer running the ESU command post
on Church and Vesey streets had a final radio communication with one of
the ESU teams in the South Tower. The team then stated that it was
ascending via stairs, was somewhere in the 20s, and was making slow
progress because of the numerous descending civilians crowding the
stairwell.143
Three plainclothes NYPD officers without radios or
protective gear had begun ascending either stairwell A or C of the North
Tower. They began checking every other floor above the 12th for civilians.
Only occasionally did they find any, and in those few cases they ordered
the civilians to evacuate immediately. While checking floors, they used
office phones to call their superiors. In one phone call an NYPD chief
instructed them to leave the North Tower, but they refused to do so. As
they climbed higher, they encountered increasing smoke and heat. Shortly
before 10:00 they arrived on the 54th floor.144
Throughout this period (9:03 to 9:59), a group of NYPD
and Port Authority police officers, as well as two Secret Service agents,
continued to assist civilians leaving the North Tower. They were
positioned around the mezzanine lobby level of the North Tower, directing
civilians leaving stairwells A and C to evacuate down an escalator to the
concourse. The officers instructed those civilians who seemed composed to
evacuate the complex calmly but rapidly. Other civilians exiting the
stairs who were either injured or exhausted collapsed at the foot of these
stairs; officers then assisted them out of the building.145
When civilians reached the concourse, another NYPD
officer stationed at the bottom of the escalator directed them to exit
through the concourse to the north and east and then out of the WTC
complex. This exit route ensured that civilians would not be endangered by
falling debris and people on West Street, on the plaza between the towers,
and on Liberty Street.146
Some officers positioned themselves at the top of a
flight of stairs by 5 WTC that led down into the concourse, going into the
concourse when necessary to evacuate injured or disoriented civilians.
Numerous other NYPD officers were stationed throughout the concourse,
assisting burned, injured, and disoriented civilians, as well as directing
all civilians to exit to the north and east. NYPD officers were also in
the South Tower lobby to assist in civilian evacuation. NYPD officers
stationed on Vesey Street between West Street and Church Street urged
civilians not to remain in the area and instead to keep walking north.147
At 9:06, the NYPD Chief of Department instructed that no
units were to land on the roof of either tower. At about 9:30, one of the
helicopters present advised that a rooftop evacuation still would not be
possible. One NYPD helicopter pilot believed one portion of the North
Tower roof to be free enough of smoke that a hoist could be lowered in
order to rescue people, but there was no one on the roof. This pilot's
helicopter never attempted to hover directly over the tower. Another
helicopter did attempt to do so, and its pilot stated that the severity of
the heat from the jet fuel-laden fire in the North Tower would have made
it impossible to hover low enough for a rescue, because the high
temperature would have destabilized the helicopter.148
At 9:51, an aviation unit warned units of large pieces
of debris hanging from the building. Prior to 9:59, no NYPD helicopter
pilot predicted that either tower would collapse.149
Interaction of 911 Calls and NYPD Operations.
At 9:37, a civilian on the 106th floor of the South Tower reported to a
911 operator that a lower floor-the "90-something floor"-was collapsing.
This information was conveyed inaccurately by the 911 operator to an NYPD
dispatcher. The dispatcher further confused the substance of the 911 call
by telling NYPD officers at the WTC complex that "the 106th floor is
crumbling" at 9:52, 15 minutes after the 911 call was placed. The NYPD
dispatcher conveyed this message on the radio frequency used in precincts
in the vicinity of the WTC and subsequently on the Special Operations
Division channel, but not on City Wide channel 1.150
PAPD Response
Initial responders from outside PAPD commands proceeded
to the police desk in 5 WTC or to the fire safety desk in the North Tower
lobby. Some officers were then assigned to assist in stairwell
evacuations; others were assigned to expedite evacuation in the plaza,
concourse, and PATH station. As information was received of civilians
trapped above ground-level floors of the North Tower, other PAPD officers
were instructed to climb to those floors for rescue efforts. Still others
began climbing toward the impact zone.151
At 9:11, the PAPD Superintendent and an inspector began
walking up stairwell B of the North Tower to assess damage near and in the
impact zone. The PAPD Chief and several other PAPD officers began
ascending a stairwell in order to reach the Windows on the World
restaurant on the 106th floor, from which calls had been made to the PAPD
police desk reporting at least 100 people trapped.152
Many PAPD officers from different commands responded on
their own initiative. By 9:30, the PAPD central police desk requested that
responding officers meet at West and Vesey and await further instructions.
In the absence of a predetermined command structure to deal with an
incident of this magnitude, a number of PAPD inspectors, captains, and
lieutenants stepped forward at around 9:30 to formulate an on-site
response plan. They were hampered by not knowing how many officers were
responding to the site and where those officers were operating. Many of
the officers who responded to this command post lacked suitable protective
equipment to enter the complex.153
By 9:58, one PAPD officer had reached the 44th-floor sky
lobby of the North Tower. Also in the North Tower, one team of PAPD
officers was in the mid-20s and another was in the lower 20s. Numerous
PAPD officers were also climbing in the South Tower, including the PAPD
ESU team. Many PAPD officers were on the ground floors of the complex-some
assisting in evacuation, others manning the PAPD desk in 5 WTC or
assisting at lobby command posts.154
OEM Response
After the South Tower was hit, OEM senior leadership
decided to remain in its "bunker" and continue conducting operations, even
though all civilians had been evacuated from 7 WTC. At approximately 9:30,
a senior OEM official ordered the evacuation of the facility, after a
Secret Service agent in 7 WTC advised him that additional commercial
planes were not accounted for. Prior to its evacuation, no outside agency
liaisons had reached OEM. OEM field responders were stationed in each
tower's lobby, at the FDNY overall command post, and, at least for some
period of time, at the NYPD command post at Church and Vesey.155
Summary
The emergency response effort escalated with the crash
of United 175 into the South Tower. With that escalation, communications
as well as command and control became increasingly critical and
increasingly difficult. First responders assisted thousands of civilians
in evacuating the towers, even as incident commanders from responding
agencies lacked knowledge of what other agencies and, in some cases, their
own responders were doing.
From 9:59 until 10:28 A.M.
At 9:58:59, the South Tower collapsed in ten seconds,
killing all civilians and emergency personnel inside, as well a number of
individuals-both first responders and civilians-in the concourse, in the
Marriott, and on neighboring streets. The building collapsed into itself,
causing a ferocious windstorm and creating a massive debris cloud. The
Marriott hotel suffered significant damage as a result of the collapse of
the South Tower.156
Civilian Response in the North Tower
The 911 calls placed from most locations in the North
Tower grew increasingly desperate as time went on. As late as 10:28,
people remained alive in some locations, including on the 92nd and 79th
floors. Below the impact zone, it is likely that most civilians who were
physically and emotionally capable of descending had exited the tower. The
civilians who were nearing the bottom of stairwell C were assisted out of
the building by NYPD, FDNY, and PAPD personnel. Others, who experienced
difficulty evacuating, were being helped by first responders on lower
floors.157
FDNY Response Immediate Impact of the Collapse
of the South Tower. The FDNY overall
command post and posts in the North Tower lobby, the Marriott lobby, and
the staging area on West Street south of Liberty all ceased to operate
upon the collapse of the South Tower, as did EMS staging areas, because of
their proximity to the building.158
Those who had been in the North Tower lobby had no way
of knowing that the South Tower had suffered a complete collapse. Chiefs
who had fled from the overall command post on the west side of West Street
took shelter in the underground parking garage at 2 World Financial Center
and were not available to influence FDNY operations for the next ten
minutes or so.159
When the South Tower collapsed, firefighters on upper
floors of the North Tower heard a violent roar, and many were knocked off
their feet; they saw debris coming up the stairs and observed that the
power was lost and emergency lights activated. Nevertheless, those
firefighters not standing near windows facing south had no way of knowing
that the South Tower had collapsed; many surmised that a bomb had
exploded, or that the North Tower had suffered a partial collapse on its
upper floors.160
We do not know whether the repeater channel continued to
function after 9:59.161
Initial Evacuation Instructions and
Communications. The South Tower's total
collapse was immediately communicated on the Manhattan dispatch channel by
an FDNY boat on the Hudson River; but to our knowledge, no one at the site
received this information, because every FDNY command post had been
abandoned-including the overall command post, which included the Field
Comm van. Despite his lack of knowledge of what had happened to the South
Tower, a chief in the process of evacuating the North Tower lobby sent out
an order within a minute of the collapse: "Command to all units in Tower
1, evacuate the building." Another chief from the North Tower lobby soon
followed with an additional evacuation order issued on tactical 1.162
Evacuation orders did not follow the protocol for giving
instructions when a building's collapse may be imminent-a protocol that
includes constantly repeating "Mayday, Mayday, Mayday"-during the 29
minutes between the fall of the South Tower and that of the North Tower.
In addition, most of the evacuation instructions did not mention that the
South Tower had collapsed. However, at least three firefighters heard
evacuation instructions which stated that the North Tower was in danger of
"imminent collapse."163
FDNY Personnel above the Ground Floors of the
North Tower. Within minutes, some
firefighters began to hear evacuation orders over tactical 1. At least one
chief also gave the evacuation instruction on the command channel used
only by chiefs in the North Tower, which was much less crowded.164
At least two battalion chiefs on upper floors of the
North Tower-one on the 23rd floor and one on the 35th floor-heard the
evacuation instruction on the command channel and repeated it to everyone
they came across. The chief on the 23rd floor apparently aggressively took
charge to ensure that all firefighters on the floors in the immediate area
were evacuating. The chief on the 35th floor also heard a separate radio
communication stating that the South Tower had collapsed (which the chief
on the 23rd floor may have heard as well). He subsequently acted with a
sense of urgency, and some firefighters heard the evacuation order for the
first time when he repeated it on tactical 1.This chief also had a
bullhorn and traveled to each of the stairwells and shouted the evacuation
order: "All FDNY, get the fuck out!" As a result of his efforts, many
firefighters who had not been in the process of evacuating began to do so.165
Other firefighters did not receive the evacuation
transmissions, for one of four reasons: First, some FDNY radios did not
pick up the transmission because of the difficulties of radio
communications in high-rises. Second, the numbers trying to use tactical 1
after the South Tower collapsed may have drowned out some evacuation
instructions. According to one FDNY lieutenant who was on the 31st floor
of the North Tower at the time, "[Tactical] channel 1 just might have been
so bogged down that it may have been impossible to get that order
through."166 Third, some firefighters in the North Tower were off-duty and
did not have radios. Fourth, some firefighters in the North Tower had been
dispatched to the South Tower and likely were on the different tactical
channel assigned to that tower.167
FDNY personnel in the North Tower who received the
evacuation orders did not respond uniformly. Some units-including one
whose officer knew that the South Tower had collapsed-either delayed or
stopped their evacuation in order to assist nonambulatory civilians. Some
units whose members had become separated during the climb attempted to
regroup so they could descend together. Some units began to evacuate but,
according to eyewitnesses, did not hurry. At least several firefighters
who survived believed that they and others would have evacuated more
urgently had they known of the South Tower's complete collapse. Other
firefighters continued to sit and rest on floors while other companies
descended past them and reminded them that they were supposed to evacuate.
Some firefighters were determined not to leave the building while other
FDNY personnel remained inside and, in one case, convinced others to
remain with them. In another case, firefighters had successfully descended
to the lobby, where another firefighter then persuaded them to reascend in
order to look for specific FDNY personnel.168
Other FDNY personnel did not hear the evacuation order
on their radio but were advised orally to leave the building by other
firefighters and police who were themselves evacuating.169
By 10:24, approximately five FDNY companies reached the
bottom of stairwell B and entered the North Tower lobby. They stood in the
lobby for more than a minute, not certain what to do, as no chiefs were
present. Finally, one firefighter-who had earlier seen from a window that
the South Tower had collapsed-urged that they all leave, as this tower
could fall as well. The units then proceeded to exit onto West Street.
While they were doing so, the North Tower began its pancake collapse,
killing some of these men.170
Other FDNY Personnel.
The Marriott Hotel suffered significant damage in the collapse of the
South Tower. Those in the lobby were knocked down and enveloped in the
darkness of a debris cloud. Some were hurt but could walk. Others were
more severely injured, and some were trapped. Several firefighters came
across a group of about 50 civilians who had been taking shelter in the
restaurant and assisted them in evacuating. Up above, at the time of the
South Tower's collapse four companies were descending the stairs single
file in a line of approximately 20 men. Four survived.171
At the time of the South Tower's collapse, two FDNY
companies were either at the eastern side of the North Tower lobby, near
the mall concourse, or actually in the mall concourse, trying to reach the
South Tower. Many of these men were thrown off their feet by the collapse
of the South Tower; they then attempted to regroup in the darkness of the
debris cloud and evacuate civilians and themselves, not knowing that the
South Tower had collapsed. Several of these firefighters subsequently
searched the PATH station below the con-course-unaware that the PAPD had
cleared the area of all civilians by 9:19.172
At about 10:15, the FDNY Chief of Department and the
Chief of Safety, who had returned to West Street from the parking garage,
confirmed that the South Tower had collapsed. The Chief of Department
issued a radio order for all units to evacuate the North Tower, repeating
it about five times. He then directed that the FDNY command post be moved
further north on West Street and told FDNY units in the area to proceed
north on West Street toward Chambers Street. At approximately 10:25, he
radioed for two ladder companies to respond to the Marriott, where he was
aware that both FDNY personnel and civilians were trapped.173
Many chiefs, including several of those who had been in
the North Tower lobby, did not learn that the South Tower had collapsed
until 30 minutes or more after the event. According to two eyewitnesses,
however, one senior FDNY chief who knew that the South Tower had collapsed
strongly expressed the opinion that the North Tower would not collapse,
because unlike the South Tower, it had not been hit on a corner.174
After the South Tower collapsed, some firefighters on
the streets neighboring the North Tower remained where they were or came
closer to the North Tower. Some of these firefighters did not know that
the South Tower had collapsed, but many chose despite that knowledge to
remain in an attempt to save additional lives. According to one such
firefighter, a chief who was preparing to mount a search-and-rescue
mission in the Marriott, "I would never think of myself as a leader of men
if I had headed north on West Street after [the] South Tower collapsed."
Just outside the North Tower on West Street one firefighter was directing
others exiting the building, telling them when no jumpers were coming down
and it was safe to run out. A senior chief had grabbed an NYPD bullhorn
and was urging firefighters exiting onto West Street to continue running
north, well away from the WTC. Three of the most senior and respected
members of the FDNY were involved in attempting to rescue civilians and
firefighters from the Marriott.175
NYPD Response
A member of the NYPD Aviation Unit radioed that the
South Tower had collapsed immediately after it happened, and further
advised that all people in the WTC complex and nearby areas should be
evacuated. At 10:04, NYPD aviation reported that the top 15 stories of the
North Tower "were glowing red" and that they might collapse. At 10:08, a
helicopter pilot warned that he did not believe the North Tower would last
much longer.176
Immediately after the South Tower collapsed, many NYPD
radio frequencies became overwhelmed with transmissions relating to
injured, trapped, or missing officers. As a result, NYPD radio
communications became strained on most channels. Nevertheless, they
remained effective enough for the two closest NYPD mobilization points to
be moved further from the WTC at 10:06.177
Just like most firefighters, the ESU rescue teams in the
North Tower had no idea that the South Tower had collapsed. However, by
10:00 the ESU officer running the command post at Church and Vesey ordered
the evacuation of all ESU units from the WTC complex. This officer, who
had observed the South Tower collapse, reported it to ESU units in the
North Tower in his evacuation instruction.178
This instruction was clearly heard by the two ESU units
already in the North Tower and the other ESU unit preparing to enter the
tower. The ESU team on the 31st floor found the full collapse of the South
Tower so unfathomable that they radioed back to the ESU officer at the
command post and asked him to repeat his communication. He reiterated his
urgent message.179
The ESU team on the 31st floor conferred with the FDNY
personnel there to ensure that they, too, knew that they had to evacuate,
then proceeded down stairwell B. During the descent, they reported seeing
many firefighters who were resting and did not seem to be in the process
of evacuating. They further reported advising these firefighters to
evacuate, but said that at times they were not acknowledged. In the
opinion of one of the ESU officers, some of these firefighters essentially
refused to take orders from cops. At least one firefighter who was in the
North Tower has supported that assessment, stating that he was not going
to take an evacuation instruction from a cop that morning. However,
another firefighter reports that ESU officers ran past him without
advising him to evacuate.180
The ESU team on the 11th floor began descending
stairwell C after receiving the evacuation order. Once near the mezzanine
level-where stairwell C ended-this team spread out in chain formation,
stretching from several floors down to the mezzanine itself. They used
their flashlights to provide a path of beacons through the darkness and
debris for civilians climbing down the stairs. Eventually, when no one
else appeared to be descending, the ESU team exited the North Tower and
ran one at a time to 6 WTC, dodging those who still were jumping from the
upper floors of the North Tower by acting as spotters for each other. They
remained in the area, conducting additional searches for civilians; all
but two of them died.181
After surviving the South Tower's collapse, the ESU team
that had been preparing to enter the North Tower spread into chain
formation and created a path for civilians (who had exited from the North
Tower mezzanine) to evacuate the WTC complex by descending the stairs on
the north side of 5 and 6 WTC, which led down to Vesey Street. They
remained at this post until the North Tower collapsed, yet all survived.182
The three plainclothes NYPD officers who had made it up
to the 54th floor of the North Tower felt the building shake violently at
9:59 as the South Tower collapsed (though they did not know the cause).
Immediately thereafter, they were joined by three firefighters from an
FDNY engine company. One of the firefighters apparently heard an
evacuation order on his radio, but responded in a return radio
communication, "We're not fucking coming out!" However, the firefighters
urged the police officers to descend because they lacked the protective
gear and equipment needed to handle the increasing smoke and heat. The
police officers reluctantly began descending, checking that the lower
floors were clear of civilians. They proceeded down stairwell B, poking
their heads into every floor and briefly looking for civilians.183
Other NYPD officers helping evacuees on the mezzanine
level of the North Tower were enveloped in the debris cloud that resulted
from the South Tower's collapse. They struggled to regroup in the darkness
and to evacuate both themselves and civilians they encountered. At least
one of them died in the collapse of the North Tower. At least one NYPD
officer from this area managed to evacuate out toward 5 WTC, where he
teamed up with a Port Authority police officer and acted as a spotter in
advising the civilians who were still exiting when they could safely run
from 1 WTC to 5 WTC and avoid being struck by people and debris falling
from the upper floors.184
At the time of the collapse of the South Tower, there
were numerous NYPD officers in the concourse, some of whom are believed to
have died there. Those who survived struggled to evacuate themselves in
darkness, assisting civilians as they exited the concourse in all
directions.185
Port Authority Response
The collapse of the South Tower forced the evacuation of
the PAPD command post on West and Vesey, compelling PAPD officers to move
north. There is no evidence that PAPD officers without WTC Command radios
received an evacuation order by radio. Some of these officers in the North
Tower decided to evacuate, either on their own or in consultation with
other first responders they came across. Some greatly slowed their own
descent in order to assist nonambulatory civilians.186
After 10:28 A.M.
The North Tower collapsed at 10:28:25 A.M., killing all civilians alive on
upper floors, an undetermined number below, and scores of first
responders. The FDNY Chief of Department, the Port Authority Police
Department Superintendent, and many of their senior staff were killed.
Incredibly, twelve firefighters, one PAPD officer, and three civilians who
were descending stairwell B of the North Tower survived its collapse.187
On September 11, the nation suffered the largest loss of
life-2,973-on its soil as a result of hostile attack in its history. The
FDNY suffered 343 fatalities- the largest loss of life of any emergency
response agency in history. The PAPD suffered 37 fatalities-the largest
loss of life of any police force in history. The NYPD suffered 23
fatalities-the second largest loss of life of any police force in history,
exceeded only by the number of PAPD officers lost the same day.188
Mayor Giuliani, along with the Police and Fire
commissioners and the OEM director, moved quickly north and established an
emergency operations command post at the Police Academy. Over the coming
hours, weeks, and months, thousands of civilians and city, state, and
federal employees devoted themselves around the clock to putting New York
City back on its feet.189
If it had happened on any other day, the disaster at the
Pentagon would be remembered as a singular challenge and an extraordinary
national story. Yet the calamity at the World Trade Center that same
morning included catastrophic damage 1,000 feet above the ground that
instantly imperiled tens of thousands of people. The two experiences are
not comparable. Nonetheless, broader les-

The Twin Towers following the impact of American Airlines Flight 11
and United Airlines Flight 175

The Pentagon, after being struck by American Airlines Flight 77

United Airlines Flight 93 crash site, Shanksville, Pennsylvania
sons in integrating multiagency response efforts are
apparent when we analyze the response at the Pentagon.
The emergency response at the Pentagon represented a mix
of local, state, and federal jurisdictions and was generally effective. It
overcame the inherent complications of a response across jurisdictions
because the Incident Command System, a formalized management structure for
emergency response, was in place in the National Capital Region on 9/11.190
Because of the nature of the event-a plane crash, fire,
and partial building collapse-the Arlington County Fire Department served
as incident commander. Different agencies had different roles. The
incident required a major rescue, fire, and medical response from
Arlington County at the U.S. military's headquarters-a facility under the
control of the secretary of defense. Since it was a terrorist attack, the
Department of Justice was the lead federal agency in charge (with
authority delegated to the FBI for operational response). Additionally,
the terrorist attack affected the daily operations and emergency
management requirements of Arlington County and all bordering and
surrounding jurisdictions.191
At 9:37, the west wall of the Pentagon was hit by
hijacked American Airlines Flight 77, a Boeing 757. The crash caused
immediate and catastrophic damage. All 64 people aboard the airliner were
killed, as were 125 people inside the Pentagon (70 civilians and 55
military service members). One hundred six people were seriously injured
and transported to area hospitals.192
While no emergency response is flawless, the response to
the 9/11 terrorist attack on the Pentagon was mainly a success for three
reasons: first, the strong professional relationships and trust
established among emergency responders; second, the adoption of the
Incident Command System; and third, the pursuit of a regional approach to
response. Many fire and police agencies that responded had extensive prior
experience working together on regional events and training exercises.
Indeed, at the time preparations were under way at many of these agencies
to ensure public safety at the annual meetings of the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank scheduled to be held later that month in
Washington, D.C.193
Local, regional, state, and federal agencies immediately
responded to the Pentagon attack. In addition to county fire, police, and
sheriff's departments, the response was assisted by the Metropolitan
Washington Airports Authority, Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport
Fire Department, Fort Myer Fire Department, the Virginia State Police, the
Virginia Department of Emergency Management, the FBI, FEMA, a National
Medical Response Team, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, and
numerous military personnel within the Military District of Washington.194
Command was established at 9:41.At the same time, the
Arlington County Emergency Communications Center contacted the fire
departments of Fairfax County, Alexandria, and the District of Columbia to
request mutual aid.
The incident command post provided a clear view of and
access to the crash site, allowing the incident commander to assess the
situation at all times.195
At 9:55, the incident commander ordered an evacuation of
the Pentagon impact area because a partial collapse was imminent; it
occurred at 9:57, and no first responder was injured.196
At 10:15, the incident commander ordered a full
evacuation of the command post because of the warning of an approaching
hijacked aircraft passed along by the FBI. This was the first of three
evacuations caused by reports of incoming aircraft, and the evacuation
order was well communicated and well coordinated.197
Several factors facilitated the response to this
incident, and distinguish it from the far more difficult task in New York.
There was a single incident, and it was not 1,000 feet above ground. The
incident site was relatively easy to secure and contain, and there were no
other buildings in the immediate area. There was no collateral damage
beyond the Pentagon.198
Yet the Pentagon response encountered difficulties that
echo those experienced in New York. As the "Arlington County: After-Action
Report" notes, there were significant problems with both self-dispatching
and communications: "Organizations, response units, and individuals
proceeding on their own initiative directly to an incident site, without
the knowledge and permission of the host jurisdiction and the Incident
Commander, complicate the exercise of command, increase the risks faced by
bonafide responders, and exacerbate the challenge of accountability." With
respect to communications, the report concludes: "Almost all aspects of
communications continue to be problematic, from initial notification to
tactical operations. Cellular telephones were of little value.... Radio
channels were initially oversaturated.. . . Pagers seemed to be the most
reliable means of notification when available and used, but most
firefighters are not issued pagers."199
It is a fair inference, given the differing situations
in New York City and Northern Virginia, that the problems in command,
control, and communications that occurred at both sites will likely recur
in any emergency of similar scale. The task looking forward is to enable
first responders to respond in a coordinated manner with the greatest
possible awareness of the situation.
Like the national defense effort described in chapter 1,
the emergency response to the attacks on 9/11 was necessarily improvised.
In New York, the FDNY, NYPD, the Port Authority, WTC employees, and the
building occupants themselves did their best to cope with the effects of
an unimaginable catastrophe-unfolding furiously over a mere 102
minutes-for which they were unprepared in terms of both training and
mindset. As a result of the efforts of first responders, assistance from
each other, and their own good instincts and goodwill, the vast majority
of civilians below the impact zone were able to evacuate the towers.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology has
provided a preliminary estimation that between 16,400 and 18,800 civilians
were in the WTC complex as of 8:46 A.M. on September 11. At most 2,152
individuals died at the WTC complex who were not (1) fire or police first
responders, (2) security or fire safety personnel of the WTC or individual
companies, (3) volunteer civilians who ran to the WTC after the planes'
impact to help others, or (4) on the two planes that crashed into the Twin
Towers. Out of this total number of fatalities, we can account for the
workplace location of 2,052 individuals, or 95.35 percent. Of this number,
1,942 or 94.64 percent either worked or were supposed to attend a meeting
at or above the respective impact zones of the Twin Towers; only 110, or
5.36 percent of those who died, worked below the impact zone. While a
given person's office location at the WTC does not definitively indicate
where that individual died that morning or whether he or she could have
evacuated, these data strongly suggest that the evacuation was a success
for civilians below the impact zone.200
Several factors influenced the evacuation on September
11. It was aided greatly by changes made by the Port Authority in response
to the 1993 bombing and by the training of both Port Authority personnel
and civilians after that time. Stairwells remained lit near unaffected
floors; some tenants relied on procedures learned in fire drills to help
them to safety; others were guided down the stairs by fire safety
officials based in the lobby. Because of damage caused by the impact of
the planes, the capability of the sophisticated building systems may have
been impaired. Rudimentary improvements, however, such as the addition of
glow strips to the handrails and stairs, were credited by some as the
reason for their survival. The general evacuation time for the towers
dropped from more than four hours in 1993 to under one hour on September
11 for most civilians who were not trapped or physically incapable of
enduring a long descent.
First responders also played a significant role in the
success of the evacuation. Some specific rescues are quantifiable, such as
an FDNY company's rescue of civilians trapped on the 22d floor of the
North Tower, or the success of FDNY, PAPD, and NYPD personnel in carrying
nonambulatory civilians out of both the North and South Towers. In other
instances, intangibles combined to reduce what could have been a much
higher death total. It is impossible to measure how many more civilians
who descended to the ground floors would have died but for the NYPD and
PAPD personnel directing them-via safe exit routes that avoided jumpers
and debris-to leave the complex urgently but calmly. It is impossible to
measure how many more civilians would have died but for the determination
of many members of the FDNY, PAPD, and NYPD to continue assisting
civilians after the South Tower collapsed. It is impossible to measure the
calming influence that ascending firefighters had on descending civilians
or whether but for the firefighters' presence the poor behavior of a very
few civilians could have caused a dangerous and panicked mob flight. But
the positive impact of the first responders on the evacuation came at a
tremendous cost of first responder lives lost.201
Civilian and
Private-Sector Challenges
The "first" first responders on 9/11, as in most
catastrophes, were private-sector civilians. Because 85 percent of our
nation's critical infrastructure is controlled not by government but by
the private sector, private-sector civilians are likely to be the first
responders in any future catastrophes. For that reason, we have assessed
the state of private sector and civilian preparedness in order to
formulate recommendations to address this critical need. Our
recommendations grow out of the experience of the civilians at the World
Trade Center on 9/11.
Lack of Protocol for Rooftop Rescues.
Civilians at or above the impact zone in the North Tower had the smallest
hope of survival. Once the plane struck, they were prevented from
descending because of damage to or impassable conditions in the building's
three stairwells. The only hope for those on the upper floors of the North
Tower would have been a swift and extensive air rescue. Several factors
made this impossible. Doors leading to the roof were kept locked for
security reasons, and damage to software in the security command station
prevented a lock release order from taking effect. Even if the doors had
not been locked, structural and radiation hazards made the rooftops
unsuitable staging areas for a large number of civilians; and even if
conditions permitted general helicopter evacuations-which was not the
case-only several people could be lifted at a time.
The WTC lacked any plan for evacuation of civilians on
upper floors of the WTC in the event that all stairwells were impassable
below.
Lack of Comprehensive Evacuation of South Tower
Immediately after the North Tower Impact.
No decision has been criticized more than the decision of building
personnel not to evacuate the South Tower immediately after the North
Tower was hit. A firm and prompt evacuation order would likely have led
many to safety. Even a strictly "advisory" announcement would not have
dissuaded those who decided for themselves to evacuate. The advice to stay
in place was understandable, however, when considered in its context. At
that moment, no one appears to have thought a second plane could hit the
South Tower. The evacuation of thousands of people was seen as inherently
dangerous. Additionally, conditions were hazardous in some areas outside
the towers.202
Less understandable, in our view, is the instruction
given to some civilians who had reached the lobby to return to their
offices. They could have been held in the lobby or perhaps directed
through the underground concourse.
Despite the initial advice given over its public-address
system, the South Tower was ordered to be evacuated by the FDNY and PAPD
within 12 minutes of the North Tower's being hit. If not for a second,
unanticipated attack, the evacuation presumably would have proceeded.
Impact of Fire Safety Plan and Fire Drills on
Evacuation. Once the South Tower was hit,
civilians on upper floors wasted time ascending the stairs instead of
searching for a clear path down, when stairwell A was at least initially
passable. Although rooftop rescues had not been conclusively ruled out,
civilians were not informed in fire drills that roof doors were locked,
that rooftop areas were hazardous, and that no helicopter evacuation plan
existed.
In both towers, civilians who were able to reach the
stairs and descend were also stymied by the deviations in the stairways
and by smoke doors. This confusion delayed the evacuation of some and may
have obstructed that of others. The Port Authority has acknowledged that
in the future, tenants should be made aware of what conditions they will
encounter during descent.
Impact of 911 Calls on Evacuation.
The NYPD's 911 operators and FDNY dispatch were not adequately integrated
into the emergency response. In several ways, the 911 system was not ready
to cope with a major disaster. These operators and dispatchers were one of
the only sources of information for individuals at and above the impact
zone of the towers. The FDNY ordered both towers fully evacuated by 8:57,
but this guidance was not conveyed to 911 operators and FDNY dispatchers,
who for the next hour often continued to advise civilians not to
self-evacuate, regardless of whether they were above or below the impact
zones. Nor were 911 operators or FDNY dispatchers advised that rooftop
rescues had been ruled out. This failure may have been harmful to
civilians on the upper floors of the South Tower who called 911 and were
not told that their only evacuation hope was to attempt to descend, not to
ascend. In planning for future disasters, it is important to integrate
those taking 911 calls into the emergency response team and to involve
them in providing up-to-date information and assistance to the public.
Preparedness of Individual Civilians.
One clear lesson of September 11 is that individual civilians need to take
responsibility for maximizing the probability that they will survive,
should disaster strike. Clearly, many building occupants in the World
Trade Center did not take preparedness seriously. Individuals should know
the exact location of every stairwell in their workplace. In addition,
they should have access at all times to flashlights, which were deemed
invaluable by some civilians who managed to evacuate the WTC on September
11.
Challenges Experienced by First Responders The
Challenge of Incident Command. As noted
above, in July 2001, Mayor Giuliani updated a directive titled "Direction
and Control of Emergencies in the City of New York." The directive
designated, for different types of emergencies, an appropriate agency as
"Incident Commander"; it would be "responsible for the management of the
City's response to the emergency." The directive also provided that where
incidents are "so multifaceted that no one agency immediately stands out
as the Incident Commander, OEM will assign the role of Incident Commander
to an agency as the situation demands."203
To some degree, the Mayor's directive for incident
command was followed on 9/11. It was clear that the lead response agency
was the FDNY, and that the other responding local, federal, bistate, and
state agencies acted in a supporting role. There was a tacit understanding
that FDNY personnel would have primary responsibility for evacuating
civilians who were above the ground floors of the Twin Towers, while NYPD
and PAPD personnel would be in charge of evacuating civilians from the WTC
complex once they reached ground level. The NYPD also greatly assisted
responding FDNY units by clearing emergency lanes to the WTC.204
In addition, coordination occurred at high levels of
command. For example, the Mayor and Police Commissioner consulted with the
Chief of the Department of the FDNY at approximately 9:20.There were other
instances of coordination at operational levels, and information was
shared on an ad hoc basis. For example, an NYPD ESU team passed the news
of their evacuation order to firefighters in the North Tower.205
It is also clear, however, that the response operations
lacked the kind of integrated communications and unified command
contemplated in the directive. These problems existed both within and
among individual responding agencies.
Command and Control within First Responder
Agencies. For a unified incident management
system to succeed, each participant must have command and control of its
own units and adequate internal communications. This was not always the
case at the WTC on 9/11.
Understandably lacking experience in responding to
events of the magnitude of the World Trade Center attacks, the FDNY as an
institution proved incapable of coordinating the numbers of units
dispatched to different points within the 16-acre complex. As a result,
numerous units were congregating in the undamaged Marriott Hotel and at
the overall command post on West Street by 9:30, while chiefs in charge of
the South Tower still were in desperate need of units. With better
understanding of the resources already available, additional units might
not have been dispatched to the South Tower at 9:37.
The task of accounting for and coordinating the units
was rendered difficult, if not impossible, by internal communications
breakdowns resulting from the limited capabilities of radios in the
high-rise environment of the WTC and from confusion over which personnel
were assigned to which frequency. Furthermore, when the South Tower
collapsed the overall FDNY command post ceased to operate, which
compromised the FDNY's ability to understand the situation; an FDNY marine
unit's immediate radio communication to FDNY dispatch that the South Tower
had fully collapsed was not conveyed to chiefs at the scene. The FDNY's
inability to coordinate and account for the different radio channels that
would be used in an emergency of this scale contributed to the early lack
of units in the South Tower, whose lobby chief initially could not
communicate with anyone outside that tower.206
Though almost no one at 9:50 on September 11 was
contemplating an imminent total collapse of the Twin Towers, many first
responders and civilians were contemplating the possibility of imminent
additional terrorist attacks throughout New York City. Had any such
attacks occurred, the FDNY's response would have been severely compromised
by the concentration of so many of its off-duty personnel, particularly
its elite personnel, at the WTC.
The Port Authority's response was hampered by the lack
of both standard operating procedures and radios capable of enabling
multiple commands to respond in unified fashion to an incident at the WTC.
Many officers reporting from the tunnel and airport commands could not
hear instructions being issued over the WTC Command frequency. In
addition, command and control was complicated by senior Port Authority
Police officials becoming directly involved in frontline rescue
operations.
The NYPD experienced comparatively fewer internal
command and control and communications issues. Because the department has
a history of mobilizing thousands of officers for major events requiring
crowd control, its technical radio capability and major incident protocols
were more easily adapted to an incident of the magnitude of 9/11. In
addition, its mission that day lay largely outside the towers themselves.
Although there were ESU teams and a few individual police officers
climbing in the towers, the vast majority of NYPD personnel were staged
outside, assisting with crowd control and evacuation and securing other
sites in the city. The NYPD ESU division had firm command and control over
its units, in part because there were so few of them (in comparison to the
number of FDNY companies) and all reported to the same ESU command post.
It is unclear, however, whether non-ESU NYPD officers operating on the
ground floors, and in a few cases on upper floors, of the WTC were as well
coordinated.
Significant shortcomings within the FDNY's command and
control capabilities were painfully exposed on September 11. To its great
credit, the department has made a substantial effort in the past three
years to address these. While significant problems in the command and
control of the PAPD also were exposed on September 11, it is less clear
that the Port Authority has adopted new training exercises or major
incident protocols to address these shortcomings.207
Lack of Coordination among First Responder
Agencies. Any attempt to establish a
unified command on 9/11 would have been further frustrated by the lack of
communication and coordination among responding agencies. Certainly, the
FDNY was not "responsible for the management of the City's response to the
emergency," as the Mayor's directive would have required. The command
posts were in different locations, and OEM headquarters, which could have
served as a focal point for information sharing, did not play an
integrating role in ensuring that information was shared among agencies on
9/11, even prior to its evacuation. There was a lack of comprehensive
coordination between FDNY, NYPD, and PAPD personnel climbing above the
ground floors in the Twin Towers.
Information that was critical to informed decisionmaking
was not shared among agencies. FDNY chiefs in leadership roles that
morning have told us that their decision making capability was hampered by
a lack of information from NYPD aviation. At 9:51 A.M., a helicopter pilot
cautioned that "large pieces" of the South Tower appeared to be about to
fall and could pose a danger to those below. Immediately after the tower's
collapse, a helicopter pilot radioed that news. This transmission was
followed by communications at 10:08, 10:15, and 10:22 that called into
question the condition of the North Tower. The FDNY chiefs would have
benefited greatly had they been able to communicate with personnel in a
helicopter.
The consequence of the lack of real-time intelligence
from NYPD aviation should not be overstated. Contrary to a widely held
misperception, no NYPD helicopter predicted the fall of either tower
before the South Tower collapsed, and no NYPD personnel began to evacuate
the WTC complex prior to that time. Furthermore, the FDNY, as an
institution, was in possession of the knowledge that the South Tower had
collapsed as early as the NYPD, as its fall had been immediately reported
by an FDNY boat on a dispatch channel. Because of internal breakdowns
within the department, however, this information was not disseminated to
FDNY personnel on the scene.
The FDNY, PAPD, and NYPD did not coordinate their units
that were searching the WTC complex for civilians. In many cases,
redundant searches of specific floors and areas were conducted. It is
unclear whether fewer first responders in the aggregate would have been in
the Twin Towers if there had been an integrated response, or what impact,
if any, redundant searches had on the total number of first responder
fatalities.
Whether the lack of coordination between the FDNY and
NYPD on September 11 had a catastrophic effect has been the subject of
controversy. We believe that there are too many variables for us to
responsibly quantify those consequences. It is clear that the lack of
coordination did not affect adversely the evacuation of civilians. It is
equally clear, however, that the Incident Command System did not function
to integrate awareness among agencies or to facilitate interagency
response.208
If New York and other major cities are to be prepared
for future terrorist attacks, different first responder agencies within
each city must be fully coordinated, just as different branches of the
U.S. military are. Coordination entails a unified command that
comprehensively deploys all dispatched police, fire, and other first
responder resources.
In May 2004, New York City adopted an emergency response
plan that expressly contemplates two or more agencies jointly being lead
agency when responding to a terrorist attack but does not mandate a
comprehensive and unified incident command that can deploy and monitor all
first responder resources from one overall command post. In our judgment,
this falls short of an optimal response plan, which requires clear command
and control, common training, and the trust that such training creates.
The experience of the military suggests that integrated into such a
coordinated response should be a unified field intelligence unit, which
should receive and combine information from all first responders-including
911 operators. Such a field intelligence unit could be valuable in large
and complex incidents.
Radio Communication Challenges:The Effectiveness
and Urgency of Evacuation Instructions. As
discussed above, the location of the NYPD ESU command post was crucial in
making possible an urgent evacuation order explaining the South Tower's
full collapse. Firefighters most certainly would have benefited from that
information.
A separate matter is the varied success at conveying
evacuation instructions to personnel in the North Tower after the South
Tower's collapse. The success of NYPD ESU instruction is attributable to a
combination of (1) the strength of the radios, (2) the relatively small
numbers of individuals using them, and (3) use of the correct channel by
all.
The same three factors worked against successful
communication among FDNY personnel. First, the radios' effectiveness was
drastically reduced in the high-rise environment. Second, tactical channel
1 was simply overwhelmed by the number of units attempting to communicate
on it at 10:00. Third, some firefighters were on the wrong channel or
simply lacked radios altogether.
It is impossible to know what difference it made that
units in the North Tower were not using the repeater channel after 10:00.
While the repeater channel was at least partially operational before the
South Tower collapsed, we do not know whether it continued to be
operational after 9:59.
Even without the repeater channel, at least 24
of the at most 32 companies who were dispatched to and actually
in the North Tower received the evacuation instruction-either via radio or
directly from other first responders. Nevertheless, many of these
firefighters died, either because they delayed their evacuation to assist
civilians, attempted to regroup their units, lacked urgency, or some
combination of these factors. In addition, many other firefighters not
dispatched to the North Tower also died in its collapse. Some had their
radios on the wrong channel. Others were off-duty and lacked radios. In
view of these considerations, we conclude that the technical failure of
FDNY radios, while a contributing factor, was not the primary cause of the
many firefighter fatalities in the North Tower.209
The FDNY has worked hard in the past several years to
address its radio deficiencies. To improve radio capability in high-rises,
the FDNY has internally developed a "post radio" that is small enough for
a battalion chief to carry to the upper floors and that greatly repeats
and enhances radio signal strength.210
The story with respect to Port Authority police officers
in the North Tower is less complicated; most of them lacked access to the
radio channel on which the Port Authority police evacuation order was
given. Since September 11, the Port Authority has worked hard to integrate
the radio systems of their different commands.
. . .
The lesson of 9/11 for civilians and first responders
can be stated simply: in the new age of terror, they-we-are the primary
targets. The losses America suffered that day demonstrated both the
gravity of the terrorist threat and the commensurate need to prepare
ourselves to meet it.
The first responders of today live in a world
transformed by the attacks on 9/11. Because no one believes that every
conceivable form of attack can be prevented, civilians and first
responders will again find themselves on the front lines. We must plan for
that eventuality. A rededication to preparedness is perhaps the best way
to honor the memories of those we lost that day.
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