interdepartmental teamwork.

 

The brave, courageous, and heroic acts of New York first responders on September 11th, 2001, were rooted in a deep sense of collaboration. Interdepartmental teamwork and community-building at the World Trade Center site and Fresh Kills resulted in efficient, safe, and timely rescue and recovery efforts that highlighted the power of solidarity in the face of tragedy.

Working alongside the FBI, NY State Department of Environmental Conservation, NYC Department of Health + Mental Hygiene, and numerous other federal and state agencies, local uniformed first responders spent nearly a year on recovery work in lower Manhattan and on Staten Island transporting and sorting material, searching for remains, and cleaning contaminated surfaces across countless miles of NYC infrastructure. Thankfully, city leadership on the ground was ready and well-equipped to respond with a heightened sense of urgency. But one department whose preparedness and tireless work helped pave the way for other first responders to complete their rescue missions safely was often left out of headlines and popular narratives surrounding recovery.

This digital exhibition honors the oft-erased recovery work of the New York City Department of Sanitation (DSNY) on and after 9/11. While the colossal task of cleaning up the city, ensuring the safety of the rescue missions, and protecting New Yorkers in the wake of immense tragedy required the tireless work of thousands of first responders, DSNY’s role in these efforts is a story that remains mostly untold. Until now.

DSNY Leadership

Shares the Untold Story

  • Dennis Diggins

    Deputy Director of Fresh Kills during 9/11,

    later

    First Deputy Commissioner

  • Martin Bellew

    Director of the Bureau of Waste Disposal during 9/11

  • Michael Mucci

    Deputy Director of the Bureau of Waste Disposal during 9/11,

    later

    Director of the Bureau of Waste Disposal

  • Ted Nabavi

    Senior Environmental Manager during 9/11,

    now

    Director of Waste Management Engineering

Crane+on+WTC+Rubble.jpg

Aided by DSNY, first responders were able to recover approximately

4,000 photographs, 54,000 personal items, and

4,257 human remains, resulting in the identification of over 300 people.

Explore this digital exhibition to learn more about how DSNY helped make this possible.

One of the primary duties of DSNY on September 11, 2001, and during the ten months of recovery, was to collect, transport, sift, and sort over one and a half million tons of debris from the WTC site. But there was so much more that needed to be done to keep New Yorkers safe. From recovery operations at Fresh Kills to maintaining the day-to-day operations of the department, DSNY was responsible for responding to disaster while ensuring that the 12,000 daily tons of NYC waste was managed properly and on schedule.

Fresh Kills: the Landfill to Park Journey