Unit Plans Closed Hearings on Collapse of the Towers
Wednesday, November 17, 2004 at 06:01PM
TheSpook
The federal agency investigating the collapse of the World Trade
Center said this week that some of its deliberations would take place
in secret, including discussions on possible changes to national
building codes and standards. The announcement has been sharply
protested by advocates for families of the 9/11 victims, who said they
were considering a lawsuit to force the agency to open the meetings to
the public. For more than two years, the agency, the National Institute
of Standards and Technology, has been studying how the trade center was
built and why it fell. A draft of its final report is due in January.
In an e-mail notice sent earlier this week, the institute said that its
construction advisory committee, a group of experts overseeing the
investigation, would meet for 10 hours on Nov. 22 at its headquarters
in Gaithersburg, Md., but that only the first 2 hours would be public.
The remainder will be closed because of the agency's concerns that
discussions about changes in construction codes could prematurely
influence the building industry and the people who write the codes,
said Mat Heyman, the institute's chief of staff. "We are still
literally formulating our possible recommendations regarding
improvements in standards, codes and practices," Mr. Heyman said.
Monica Gabrielle, whose husband Richard was killed when the south tower
collapsed 57 minutes after it was hit by one of the hijacked jets,
vehemently objected to the decision. "You have one job, and one job
only - to find out the truth of what happened to those buildings and to
report to the public about it," she said yesterday in an interview.
"You don't owe industry, the Port Authority or federal agencies
anything. You owe it to the public - the truth, no matter where it
goes." [more]
9/11 Whistleblower Challenges Official Story on WTC Disaster [more]
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