|
NIST NCSTAR 1-8 (Draft)
Federal Building and Fire Safety Investigation of the
World Trade Center Disaster
The Emergency Response Operations (Draft)
September 2005
ABSTRACT The
objectives of this study were to 1) fully document what happened during
the response by the emergency services to the attacks on the WTC, up to
the time of collapse of WTC 7...
T ABLE OF
CONTENTS
Chapter 5
5.9 Emergency Response Operations at World
Trade Center 7.........................................................
108 Genesis of This
Investigation The goals of the
investigation of the WTC disaster were:
• To investigate the building construction,
the materials The specific
objectives were: 1. Determine why
and how WTC 1 and WTC 2 collapsed following the initial impacts of the
aircraft and why and how WTC 7 collapsed;
3. Determine what procedures and practices were used in the design,
construction, operation, and maintenance of WTC 1, 2, and 7
NIST’s WTC Public-Private Response Plan
The strategy to meet this goal is a
three-part NIST-led public-private response program that includes:
• A federal building and fire safety
investigation to study the most probable factors that contributed to
post-aircraft impact collapse of the WTC towers and the 47-story WTC 7
building, and the associated evacuation and emergency response
experience. Changes Made by FDNY
Following the February 1993 WTC Bombing
Interagency Protocols: The New York
City Office of Emergency Management (OEM) was established, and it took
on the job of promoting the improvement of interagency operations;
however, on September 11, 2001, the OEM center located at WTC 7 became
ineffective as WTC 7 was evacuated by the emergency response personnel.
Coordination of Response Activities with Other
Authorities at the World Trade Center:
The Office of Emergency Management (OEM) was
established in New York City after the 1993 bombing, in part, to promote
unified operations between and among the various city emergency
responder departments. On the morning of September 11, 2001, OEM
operations were disrupted with the loss of the
city’s OEM operations center located inside WTC 7. Since the OEM center
was not available for operations, NYPD, FDNY, and OEM Commissioners met
the Mayor on the street with the group initially assembling at Barclay
Street. At the same time, NYPD was establishing an alternate command
center for the Mayor and his staff at 75 Barclay Street so that he and
his staff could oversee operations. (Giuliani 2002). However, their
operations from 75 Barclay Street were disrupted by the collapse of the
towers, and they had to quickly evacuate from that site. Data show that
there was no formal structure of unified command between departments
below the Mayor and Commissioner level of operations. FDNY and NYPD
department chiefs were not working together at the same command post,
and they did not formulate unified orders or directions for their
departments. The coordination of
communications and operations between the responding authorities at the
WTC was a challenge for all emergency responders working that morning.
The short time frame related to the attack and emergency responder
operations coupled with successive significant threats requiring
response (an aircraft hitting WTC 2 after WTC 1 was hit, the possible
threat of a third aircraft coming in, the collapse of WTC 2, etc.)
compounded the difficulty of establishing a unified operation. The
challenges related to the establishment of unified operations were made
significantly worse when the OEM facility located inside WTC 7 had to be
evacuated. 1.2 TECHNICAL
APPROACH Task 4. Report
preparation: • Project 5.
Reconstruction of Thermal and Tenability Environment. Information from
emergency responders on conditions in stairwells and other areas of the
towers and WTC 7. • Project 6.
Structural Fire Response and Collapse Analysis (regarding WTC 7 only).
Information from first-person interviews on the damage inflicted on WTC
7 by the collapse of WTC 1 and WTC 2.
2.2.3 First-Person Interviews
Self-Narrative, Emergency Responder’s Experience at the
WTC:
For response to World Trade Center
Building 7: • Each emergency
responder was asked to describe their experience in their own words and
end their narrative after the WTC 7 collapse.
4.3 EMERGENCY RESPONSE OPERATIONS CHRONOLOGY
8:46 a.m. An aircraft strikes WTC 1. (FEMA 403)
9:01 a.m. WTC Security receives a report of
a fire in a parking lot. (PA/WTC Security Radio Channel X)
9:02 a.m. WTC Security receives a report of
a gas leak. (Note: Incomplete message, location of leak not identified.)
(PA/WTC Security Radio Channel X)
9:03 a.m. An aircraft strikes
WTC 2. (FEMA 403) PAPD – by this time a PAPD senior officer has
called three times for the evacuation of the World Trade Center, WTC 1
and WTC 2, and then “all buildings in the complex.” (PAPD Radio Channel
W) WTC Security reports that
another aircraft has stuck WTC 2. (PA/WTC Security Radio
Channel X) 9:44 a.m. WTC Security
receives a communication saying that “They haven’t evacuated the Fire
Command over here in building 2 or 1.” (PA/WTC Security Radio Channel X)
9:44
a.m. (E) The Office of Emergency Management operations center inside WTC
7 is evacuated. (FDNY, interview 24, winter 2004)
9:54 a.m. FDNY radio communications on the
City-wide, high-rise Channel 7 (PA/WTC Radio Channel 30) A Battalion
Chief calls for a Ladder company in the A stairway to extinguish two
fires. They are attempting to stretch building hose lines on about floor
78. (PA/WTC Radio Channel 30 recording)
FDNY radio communications on the City-wide,
high-rise Channel 7 (PA/WTC Radio Channel 30) A firefighter calls to the
Battalion Chief that he is on floor 55 and must stop to rest. (PA/WTC
Radio Channel 30 recording) 9:56
a.m. FDNY radio communications on the City-wide, high-rise Channel 7
(PA/WTC Radio Channel 30): inside WTC 2, a firefighter states they are
in the B stairway and that they will have to put some fire out in order
to get to the A stairway. (PA/WTC Radio Channel 30 recording)
9:59
a.m. FDNY Marine unit reports the collapse of WTC 2. (FDNY World
Trade Center Incident Summary, 2001)
10:28 a.m. FDNY Marine unit advises that the second WTC tower collapsed.
(FDNY World Trade Center Incident Summary, 2001)
4.4 CHRONOLOGY OF THE WTC TOWERS
Information provided by this chronology
partially describes the variable conditions found in WTC 1 and WTC 2.
The impact of the first aircraft into WTC 1 and the fires and
overpressure that resulted created significant damage down to the
building’s basement. The impact of the aircraft into WTC 2 produced jet
fuel fires in the building on the 51st floor. Other communications
indicate that there was no smoke or fire on the 68th, 73rd, or 74th
floors and that the walls in stairway B had been breached. A telephone
call to a New York City 9-1-1 telephone operator at 9:37 a.m. indicates
that a floor in the 90s level of WTC 2 had collapsed. According to NYPD
records, information from this call concerning the floor collapse in the
90s appears to have been conveyed inaccurately by the 9-1-1 call taker
and the NYPD radio dispatcher.6 The NYPD dispatcher transmitted the
message at 9:41 a.m. and again at 9:51 a.m., identifying the collapsed
floor as being the 106th floor. Communications from the NYPD aviations
units describes a steady deterioration of the two WTC towers before they
collapsed.
8:47 a.m. WTC Security reports that there
is a fire on floor 22 of WTC 1 (PA/WTC Security Radio Channel X)
8:49 a.m. WTC Security reports that there
is damage and a lot of debris on floor 22 of WTC 1 (PA/WTC Security
Radio Channel X)
8:51 a.m. PAPD police desk receives a call that an explosion was
observed in the basement of the B1 level of WTC 1. The police
desk informs the officer on the B1 level that what he saw resulted from
an explosion on the upper floors of the building. (PAPD Radio Channel W)
8:57 a.m. PAPD police desk receives
report that water pipes are broken on the B4 level of WTC 1. (PAPD Radio
Channel W) 9:10 a.m. PAPD police
desk receives a report that there is burning jet fuel on floor 51 of one
of the towers. (Note: Communications suggest this is WTC 2.) (PAPD Radio
Channel W) 9:41 a.m. NYPD
dispatcher advises units that floor 106 in WTC 2 is collapsing and that
the message comes from someone on that floor. (NYPD Division 1 Radio
Channel)
9:47 a.m. FDNY radio
communications on the City-wide, high-rise Channel 7 (PA/WTC Radio
Channel 30): a firefighter
inside WTC 2 reports that he is standing in the B stairway on floor 74
and there is no smoke or fire problem. He reports that the
stairway walls have been breached on floors 73 and 74. Another FDNY unit
in the same stairway reports that the walls were also breached on floor
68. (PA/WTC Radio Channel 30 recording)
9:51 a.m. NYPD dispatcher advises that at
WTC 2, floor 106 is crumbling per communications with victims trapped on
the floor. (NYPD SOD Radio Channel)
9:58 a.m. NYPD aviation unit advises that the south tower is coming
down. (NYPD SOD Radio Channel)
10:06 a.m. NYPD officer advises that it isn’t going to take much longer
before the north tower comes down and to pull emergency vehicles
back from the building. (NYPD SOD Radio Channel)
10:20 a.m. NYPD aviation unit reports
that the top of the tower might be leaning. (NYPD SOD Radio Channel)
10:21 a.m. NYPD aviation unit reports that
the north tower is buckling on the southwest corner and leaning to the
south. (NYPD SOD Radio Channel)
NYPD officer advises that all personnel close to the building pull back
three blocks in every direction. (NYPD SOD Radio Channel)
10:27 a.m. NYPD aviation unit reports that the roof is going to come
down very shortly. (NYPD SOD Radio Channel)
10:28 a.m. NYPD officer reports that the tower is collapsing.
(NYPD SOD Radio Channel)
5.9 EMERGENCY RESPONSE OPERATIONS AT WORLD TRADE CENTER 7
World Trade Center 7 (WTC 7) was an
important building with regard to the attack on the World Trade Center.
The New York City Office of Emergency Management (OEM) was located on
the 3rd and 23rd floors of WTC 7.366 The OEM office on the
23rd floor contained the emergency operations post for OEM and was
designed to function as a command center to help coordinate multi-agency
operations at incidents in the city.367 (Sheirer 2004) On
September 11, 2001, WTC 7 became threatened as the WTC complex was
attacked. When the first aircraft
struck WTC 1, the electrical power went out for several seconds inside
WTC 7.368 Many people immediately began leaving the building,
and the OEM operations center began receiving calls related to the
emergency.369 As the
second aircraft struck WTC 2, a decision was made to evacuate WTC 7.370
By the time WTC 2 was struck by
the second aircraft at 9:03 a.m., many WTC 7 occupants had already left
the building and others had begun a self-evacuation of the
building. Shortly after WTC 2
was struck, a firefighter entered WTC 7 from the Washington and Vesey
Streets side, connected a hose line onto the “A” stairwell sprinkler
riser and started the Engines pumps.371 At
approximately 9:30 a.m., FDNY, EMS established a Division for assisting
victims at WTC 7.372 An EMS triage center was established in
the lobby of WTC 7 as occupants from WTC 1 and WTC 6 evacuated through
WTC 7.373 At
approximately 9:44 a.m., after the report of a third aircraft
heading into the city and news that the Pentagon had been attacked,
a Deputy OEM Commissioner
ordered the complete evacuation of WTC 7. (Sheirer 2004)
This order included the
evacuation of the OEM operations center on the 23rd floor. The
loss of the OEM operations center created difficulties related to the
coordination of emergency responder operations and resources.374
Before the OEM operations center was evacuated, OEM had assigned
personnel to work with each of the emergency responder command posts.
This reduced the impact of the loss of the WTC 7 OEM office. (See
Chapter 8.) Occupants evacuating from WTC 7 used both the elevators and
stairways as they left the building.375 Shortly after WTC 7
was evacuated, the FDNY Fire Commissioner arrived, looking for the Mayor
who he believed to be at the OEM center on the 23rd floor. A guard met
the Commissioner in the lobby and ordered him and his staff out of the
building. The guard told him, “This building has been evacuated.” and
that “OEM, the mayor, they’re all gone.” (Von Essen 2002)
At 9:59 a.m., WTC 2 collapsed, and debris
from the collapse struck the south face of WTC 7.376
At 10:28 a.m., WTC 1 collapsed
and a significant amount of damage was done to WTC 7.377 A
large amount of debris crashed through the front center of the building
from approximately the 10th floor down to ground level,
and debris ripped a part of the
southwest corner off from approximately the 8th floor up to the 18th
floor.378 The
collapse of WTC 1 also appears to be responsible for starting fires
inside of WTC 7.379 With the collapse of the two
towers, a New York City employee and a WTC 7 building staff
person became trapped inside of WTC 7.380 The two had gone to
the OEM center on the 23rd floor and found no one there. As they went to
get into an elevator to go downstairs the lights inside of WTC 7
flickered as WTC 2 collapsed. At this point, the elevator they were
attempting to catch no longer worked, so they started down the
staircase. When they got to the 6th floor, WTC 1 collapsed, the lights
went out in the staircase, the
sprinklers came on briefly, and the staircase filled with smoke
and debris. The two men went back to the 8th floor broke out a window
and called for help. Firefighters on the ground saw them and went up the
stairs. In addition, a security officer for one of the businesses in the
building was also was trapped on the 7th floor by the smoke in the
stairway. As the firefighters went up, they vented the stairway and
cleared some of the smoke. They first met the security officer on the
7th floor and firefighters escorted him down the stairs. Other
firefighters from the group continued up the stairs, shined their
flashlight through the staircase smoke and called out. The two trapped
men on the 8th floor saw the flashlight beam and heard the firefighters
calling and went down the stairway. The firefighters took the men
outside and directed them away from the building.381
At
approximately 11:30 a.m., FDNY assigned a Chief Officer to take charge
of operations at WTC 7. The Chief was initially given orders to
put the fires out in WTC 7.382 From the Chief’s assigned
location at WTC 7, he reported that looking south toward WTC 7, they
could not see the building because of the large smoke and dust cloud.
The Chief Officer was able to negotiate the debris fields, get to the
building, and see the WTC 7 logo on the side. There were numerous burned
out FDNY vehicles around WTC 7. At the corner of Vesey and West
Broadway, a FDNY Engine was connected to a hydrant at the corner of WTC
7. Hose lines were stretched, and the Engine’s pump was still running
even though the Engine was on fire and was almost burned out. There was
no water coming out of the hydrant system.383 One FDNY Chief
Officer that entered WTC 7 indicated that he opened a standpipe on the
4th floor of one stairway and
found no water in the standpipe system.384 A FDNY fire
boat and the retired FDNY fire boat “Harvey” were located at the shore
on the Hudson River near the site. They were starting to stretch lines
up to the WTC.385 According to the FDNY first-person
interviews, water was never an
issue at WTC 7 since firefighting was never started in the building.386
When the Chief Officer in charge of WTC 7 got to Barclay Street and West
Broadway, numerous firefighters
and officers were coming out of WTC 7. These firefighters indicated that
several blocks needed to be cleared around WTC 7 because they thought
that the building was going to collapse.387
Con Edison personnel arrived at the scene and consulted with FDNY.
They wanted to know if they
should cut the power off at the WTC 7 power station. It was decided to
leave the power on and not allow Con Edison personnel to enter WTC 7
because it was not safe.388
The Con Edison personnel also
indicated that fuel tanks were located in the lower level of WTC 7.
However, they could not
determine if the fuel tanks were involved with the fires burning in the
building. FDNY personnel reported that they did not see any indication
of burning liquid fuels before the building collapsed.389
No accurate time is between approximately 12:00 noon and 2:00 p.m.
One Battalion Chief coming from the building
indicated that they had searched floors 1 through 9 and found that the
building was clear.390 In the process of the search, the
Battalion Chief met the building’s Fire Safety Director and Deputy Fire
Safety Director on the ninth floor. The Fire Safety Director reported
that the building’s floors had been cleared from the top down. By this
time, the Chief Officer responsible for WTC 7 reassessed the building
again and determined that fires
were burning on the following floors: 6, 7, 8, 17, 21, and 30.391
No accurate time is available for these actions during the WTC 7
operations; however, the sequence of event indicates that it occurred
during a time period from 12:30 p.m. to approximately 2:00 p.m.
The
Chief Officer then met with his command officer to discuss the
building’s condition and FDNY’s capabilities for controlling the
building fires. A Deputy Chief who had just returned from inside
the building reported that he had conducted an inspection up to the 7th
or 8th floor.392 He indicated that the stairway was filling
with smoke and that there was a
lot of fire inside the building. The chiefs discussed the
situation and the following conditions were identified: 393, 394
• The building had sustained damage from
debris falling into the building, and
they were not sure about the
structural stability of the building.
•
The building had large fires burning on at least six floors. Any
one of these six fires would have been considered a large incident
during normal FDNY operations. •
There was no water immediately
available for fighting the fires.
• They didn’t have equipment, hose,
standpipe kits, tools, and enough handie talkies for conducting
operations inside the building.
At approximately, 2:30 p.m.,
FDNY officers decided to completely abandon WTC 7, and the final
order was given to evacuate the site around the building. 395, 396
The order terminated the ongoing rescue operations at WTC 6 and on the
rubble pile of WTC 1. Firefighters and other emergency responders were
withdrawn from the WTC 7 area, and the building continued to burn.
At approximately 5:20 p.m., some
three hours after WTC 7 was abandoned the building experienced a
catastrophic failure and collapsed.
8.2 OFFICE OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AND MULTI-AGENCY
OPERATIONS
On the morning of September 11, 2001, OEM
operations were disrupted with the evacuation of the city’s OEM
operations center located inside WTC 7.8 The FDNY Fire
Commissioner stated the following concerning the loss of the OEM center
when he was turned away from WTC 7 shortly after it had been
evacuated: “How
ridiculous, I thought. We’ve got a thirteen-million-dollar command
center and we can’t even use it.” (Von Essen 2002)
Since the OEM center was not available for
operations, NYPD, FDNY, and OEM Commissioners met the Mayor on the
street with the group initially assembling at Barclay Street. At the
same time, NYPD was establishing an alternate command center for the
Mayor and his staff at 75 Barclay Street so that he and his staff could
oversee operations. However, their operations from 75 Barclay Street
were disrupted by the collapse of the towers, and they had to quickly
evacuate from that site. On
September 11, 2001, the OEM Operations Center located inside WTC 7 on
the 23rd floor was disrupted when the building underwent an emergency
evacuation after the second hijacked aircraft struck WTC 2. As a result,
this center became unusable and the operations of the OEM office became
less than totally effective until after WTC 1 and 2 collapsed. This loss
of OEM operations had a negative impact on interagency operations during
WTC operations. As the Mayor learned of OEM’s evacuation, he immediately
devised two priorities: 1) set up a new OEM Command Center, and 2) find
a way to communicate with the people of New York City (Giuliani 2002).
Attachment 2
CHRONOLOGY OF EMERGENCY RESPONDER OPERATIONS, WORLD
TRADE CENTER ATTACK, SEPTEMBER 11, 2001
8:46 a.m. Aircraft strikes WTC 1 on north side causing
serious building damage and starting fires on floors 94 through 98.
(FEMA 403) 8:49 a.m. WTC Security
radio report, PA Channel X – “10-4, S4, I understand there may have been
an explosion on Liberty Street.”
8:49 a.m. WTC Security radio report, PA Channel X – “Stay off the air.”
8:54:22 WTC Security radio report, PA
Channel X – “… (?)… Do you know basically where the plane hit the
building?” (Note: Two unreadable transmissions follow.) “…(?)… By the
side right over the … (?)…” “Come back, I didn’t read your transmission.
It is on the side of Building Six Tower One.” “…(?)… One hundred One
floor you said?” “ … (?)… I got too much… (?)… Here, if you can hear me
… (?)… Can you hear me with so much commotion?” “What floor? …(?)…
Building Seven. …(?)… Hit Building Seven.” “No it hit World Trade Center
One but … (?)… Building Seven. Copy?” “What floor did it hit?” “….(?)…
All the way at the top … (?) … and above.” (FDNY Box Alarm Dispatch log)
9:01:58
PAPD Police Desk radio report, PA Channel W –
“Evacuate all buildings in the
complex. You copy? All buildings in the complex.” “Roger. Units evacuate
all units, all tenants in the buildings, at the Trade, at the Trade
Center.”
9:03 a.m. Aircraft
strikes WTC 2 on the south side causing serious building damage
and starting fires on floors 78 through 84. (FEMA 403)
9:04:50 PAPD Police Desk radio report, PA
Channel W – “We have visual on
that. Not known if it was a second plane, possibly a missile.”
9:06:31 PAPD Police Desk radio report, PA
Channel W – “Units on channel W, this is 8581 Sierra.
There’s been a reported missile
launching from the Woolworth Building. CPD, if you are
monitoring, get in touch with New York City. Have them check the
Woolworth Building roof top.
9:40 - 9:49 Chief at WTC
7 is told that WTC buildings could collapse, and he dispatches
someone to tell the chiefs on West Street. (FDNY Interviews # 45 and
#46, winter 2004) 9:40 Engine 162
(post collapse operations WTC 1 and WTC 2, operations at WTC 7, hydrant
at Church and Vesey Streets, stretched line to WTC 7)
9:44 a.m. (E) The Office of Emergency Management operations center
inside WTC 7 is evacuated. (FDNY, interview 24, winter 2004)
9:47:00 FDNY radio communication, PA, WTC
Channel 30 repeater: - “Battalion 7 to Battalion 9” “Battalion 9 to
Battalion 7” “…?… These stairway walls have been compromised on 73 and
74. No smoke or fire problems, K.” “OK, 10-4”
9:47:44 FDNY radio communications, PA, WTC
Channel 30 repeater – “One Five to Battalion 7” “Go ahead, Ladder One
Five” “What do ya got up there Chief?” “I’m standing in Boy stairway on
the 74th floor, no smoke or fire problem. The walls are breached so be
careful.” “Yea, 10-4, I saw that on 68. We’re on 71. We’re coming up
behind ya.” “OK, …? … six more to go.” “Let me know when you see fire.”
9:59 a.m. WTC 2 building collapse.
(FEMA 403) WTC 1, some firefighters
up inside the building as high as the 36th floor hear an urgent order
over their radios to evacuate. It is heard over the command radio
channel. Multiple companies start down the stairs. (FDNY interviews #16,
#39, #41, winter 2004) 10:00 –
10:09 WTC 1 - A firefighter, possibly from Ladder 3, reports over the
radio a collapse on a floor in the 60’s. It is the highest floor
reported as being reached in the building. (New York Time, website,
timeline) 10:06 Box 0320, (FDNY Box
Alarm Dispatch log and CD12/CD15) Engine 160 (post collapse operations,
supplied water to two Tower Ladders operating on WTC 7)
10:07 a.m. NYPD helicopters hovering near WTC 1 to check its
condition radios, “About 15 floors down from the top, it looks like its
glowing red.” Aviation 14, radioed at 10:07 a.m. “It’s inevitable.”
Seconds later, another pilot (Aviation 6) reported:
“I don’t think this has too much
longer to go. I would evacuate all people within the area of that second
building.” (New York Times)
NYPD helicopters:
Aviation 6 warns that WTC 1
collapse is likely, and advises immediate evacuation. (NYPD,
McKinsey & Company) 10:12 Box 1377,
location of Alarm Box, Columbia and Woodhull Streets,
Engine 518 (post collapse operations, stretched hoselines and operated
in WTC 7)
Ladder 148 (post collapse Command Post operations, Broadway and Vesey
streets) 10:22:18 10-84, Engine
160, (post collapse operations, supplied water to two Tower Ladders
operating on WTC 7)
10:29 a.m.
WTC 1 building collapse. (FEMA, 403)
11:19 Ladder 84 (reported to Command Post at
Broadway and Vesey Streets, search of 5 WTC, operated Tower Ladder at
Church and Vesey Streets on 5 WTC and WTC 7
5:20:33 WTC 7
building begins to collapse. (FEMA 403)
5:21:10 p.m. WTC 7
building complete collapse. (FEMA 403)
5:21:11 FDNY Field Comm 1 reports major
collapse of World Trade Center Building #7. (FDNY World Trade Center
Incident Summary notes)
Attachment 3
LISTING OF PORT AUTHORITY, NYPD, AND FDNY COMMUNICATIONS
WTC Police Desk 1 - Ch 002 to 039 – Each one of these
recordings is 171 minutes.
Ch. 00WTC 7 phone 435-2135 TC.wav
Ch. 01WTC 7 direct line fire command WTC
1.wav Ch. 02WTC 7 radio Ch. X.wav
Ch. 03WTC 7.wav |