|
Delegates Adopt Resolution Naming 9/11 Day of
Remembrance

IAFF 1st DVP Kevin Gallagher addressed Convention delegates after reading a special
resolution making 9/11 a Day of Remembrance.
|
August 30, 2006 - Just days before the fifth anniversary
of 9/11, Convention delegates voted to make September 11 a Day of
Remembrance. During the special 9/11 tribute, New York fire fighters and
officers also thanked delegates for their recovery efforts following the
terrorist attacks.
In an impassioned speech, IAFF 1st District Vice
President Kevin Gallagher said he was overwhelmed by the generosity of
fire fighters from across the country and IAFF staff who provided
emotional and financial support to members of Local 94 and Local 854
following the attacks.
“You left your families for weeks at a time to
help us,” Gallagher said. “Your total commitment in our time of need is
something we will never forget.”

All Convention delegates received a commemorative copy of the special 9/11 resolution. |
Gallagher read the special 9/11
resolution, and each delegate received a commemorative copy.
IAFF
General Secretary-Treasurer Vincent Bollon said making September 11 a
Day of Remembrance is important so that future fire fighters don’t
forget the sacrifices their predecessors made.
“I was never so proud to
be an IAFF member as I was on 9/11,” Bollon said. Not only did the
International raise $167 million for families of deceased fire fighters,
but locals in New York and New Jersey helped provide caissons for
multiple funerals that the locals helped organize, and the staff of the
International’s Governmental Affairs and Public Policy Division
immediately pursued changes to increase the Public Safety Officers
Benefit (PSOB).
Delegates also heard about efforts to build a memorial
at New York’s 10 House on the façade of Engine 10/Ladder 10, which
served as a command post for rescue and recovery efforts at Ground Zero.
The memorial is intended to honor fire fighters who fell and those who
carry on. The memorial was dedicated in June.

IAFF General Secretary-Treasurer Vincent
Bollon thanks Harry Meyers, FDNY assistant chief, for his
efforts to build the 9/11 memorial at 10 House.
|
“Generations from now,
when memories of 9/11 have faded, people will look at this monument and
know that something terrible happened here, and then that something
extraordinarily heroic happened here when New York City fire fighters
willingly entered the burning towers and sacrificed themselves to help
those who were in peril,” said Harry Meyers, assistant chief with FDNY,
in a speech to Convention delegates.
Chief Meyers is credited for
cutting through the red tape and getting the 10 House memorial built and
opened to the public.
Click here to view resolution.
Watch video |