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Mechanics left towers before buildings collapsed

By Dennis Cauchon, USA TODAY 

When the World Trade Center was bombed in 1993, Otis Elevator's
mechanics led the rescue of 500 people trapped in elevators. Some
mechanics were dropped onto the roofs of the twin towers by helicopter.
Others, carrying 50-pound oxygen tanks on their backs, climbed through
smoke to machine rooms high in the towers. On Sept. 11, the elevator
mechanics - many of the same men involved in the rescues in 1993 - left
the buildings after the second jet struck, nearly an hour before the
first building collapsed.

The 83-person elevator crew worked for ACE Elevator, a small Palisades
Park, N.J., company that won the maintenance contract from Otis in 1994.

At the time the elevator mechanics left, dozens of people were trapped
in stuck elevators. Other people lost their lives trying to rescue those
trapped in elevators, including a mechanic from another company who
rushed to the Trade Center from down the street.

The departure of elevator mechanics from a disaster site is unusual. The
industry takes pride in rescues. In the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995,
elevator mechanics worked closely with the firefighters making rescues.

"Nobody knows the insides of a high-rise like an elevator mechanic. They
act as guides for firefighters, in addition to working on elevators,"
says Robert Caporale, editor of Elevator World, a trade magazine.

In an interview, ACE Elevator President Ron Baamonde says the
crewmembers left on their own because they were in danger. He says ACE
followed the Trade Center's emergency plan. After a jet hit the north
tower, 81 crewmembers reported to the fire command station in the south
tower lobby. Two reported by radio.

"We did a head count and were ready to deploy for rescue. The second
plane hit. It was chaotic, people screaming and yelling," Baamonde says.
"You couldn't get out the front door because debris was falling. There
was a mass exodus through the underground of the complex."

The elevator crew joined the underground exodus. The south tower fell
about 56 minutes later. During that time, firefighters and Port
Authority workers struggled to free the trapped passengers.

The World Trade Center had 99 elevators in each tower. David Bobbitt, a
Port Authority maintenance supervisor, made contact by intercom with
about 75 elevators in the north tower. He says 10 elevators were stuck.
"Some elevators had one or two people. Others had four of five," Bobbitt
says.

"Some were very emotional, as you can imagine. I heard crying and
screaming. Others were calm," Bobbitt says.

Elevators in the south tower were more crowded. People were using them
to evacuate, not knowing the second hijacked jet was on the way.

Bobbitt spoke to his counterpart in the south tower, Jim Barbella, five
minutes before the building collapsed. Barbella, who died, reported that
the stuck elevators included an express car with 19 people.

Baamonde says two ACE managers were trying to return to the building
when it collapsed.

"Our people miraculously left when the second plane hit, and it saved
our lives," Baamonde says.


(http://www.usatoday.com/news/attack/2001/12/19/usat-mechanics.htm)

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