Brought to you by


Top News
Today's Headlines
EMS Headlines
Sections
In the Line of Duty
Wildfire Central
Funding & FIRE Act
HotShots &
  Photostories

World of Fire
Forums
World Of Fire
Hometown Fire Wire
Features
NewsTicker
E-Newsletters
PagerNews
Submit Stories & Pics



Updated: Wednesday, August 21 - 11:20p
Home --> News --> Story

  E-Mail this story
to a friend/co-worker



U.S. to Probe Trade Center Collapse

SHANNON McCAFFREY
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Hoping to make skyscrapers stronger, federal officials are embarking on a two-year, $16 million investigation of the World Trade Center collapse on Sept. 11.

Recent 9-11 Stories
More 9-11 Coverage
Insider

The probe by the National Institute of Standards and Technology could be hampered by the Senate's failure to pass legislation giving federal building investigators subpoena power and other tools. The National Construction Safety Act, sponsored by Rep. Sherwood Boehlert, R-N.Y., passed the House in July but has stalled in the Senate Commerce Committee.

In the aftermath of the trade center collapse, investigators struggled to gain access to the site and to key documents, like blueprints.

The NIST probe set to get under way Wednesday is designed to be broader and more detailed than a study conducted by the American Society of Civil Engineers and funded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. That study, concluded in May, determined the 110-story twin towers could have survived the impact of the hijacked 767s but fell victim to the ensuing fire that caused the buildings' steel columns to soften and buckle.

NIST Director Arden Bement has said the relationship between fire and structural collapses will be a major focus of the probe and the investigation ``could lead to major changes in both U.S. building and fire codes and in engineering practice.''

Fluffy fireproofing sprayed onto the trade center's steel beams was jarred loose by when the jetliners slammed into the trade center, the FEMA study found. NIST investigators will look at ways to keep the fireproofing intact.

Investigators are also interested in 7 World Trade Center, which is believed to have sustained little structural damage. It collapsed due to fire alone, the first fireproofed steel structure to do so.

NIST will also examine ways to harden exit stairways to make them less vulnerable to severe impact and plans to space those stairways out so one blow might not render them all impassable. Such designs might have allowed occupants to have escaped from the floors above where the planes hit.

Glenn Corbett, assistant professor of fire science at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, called NIST's undertaking ``a landmark event.''

``This is going to be the most extensive building disaster investigation ever performed,'' Corbett said. ``The size of the disaster dictates that it has to be.''

But he said he was worried that without subpoena power the investigation could be limited.

Corbett and others were critical of the ASCE probe, saying it was too narrow in scope. He and others also complained that officials lost a crucial opportunity to examine most of the trade center's steel beams for clues, allowing them instead to be recycled.

Some of the remaining steel beams are already at NIST's Gaithersburg, Md., headquarters to be examined as part of the new probe.


Inside Firehouse.com
Today's Top Stories

   >>> More of Today's Headlines

Daily Headlines | Wildfires | EMS | Funding
FIRE Act | Terrorism | 9-11 | WOF Report
Line of Duty | HotShots



Firehouse Direct
 • E-Mail This Page to a Friend
 • Forums: Discuss Topics
 • Submit News & Photos
 • Add NewsTicker to Your Site

Sign-Up: E-News Updates
The latest headlines, bulletins & special offers in our E-Alerts!

Preview: MembersZone!
Exclusive content, Hiring profiles, Apparatus Search, Personal Start Page, Enhanced Chat & More!


Training | Health & Fitness | Technology | Harry Carter
U of Extrication | HazMat | Brannigan

Shop@Firehouse.com All of the top emergency services products.All in one place.





Hot Dispatches
2002 Memorial Services
Firehouse World 2003
Emergency Jobs
Online NFPA Training
Fire Prevention Week
Special Offers
Insurance Center
Online NFPA Training
Pros Choose SCOTT
New York Fire Store

[an error occurred while processing this directive]

Register Now - Contact Us - Submit

Privacy Policy - Terms of Use

Best Viewed IE/Netscape 5+
800x600 Screen Resolution or Highter

Copyright(c) 1997-2002

Advertising/Sponsorship Opportunities