Image Credit: EPA
- A window washer (C) is seen being rescued by NYPD and NYFD rescue after his carriage came dislodged from his cables along side the One World Trade Center in New York, New York, USA.
New York: A window washer who was left dangling from a tilting World
Trade Centre scaffold said Friday that he would go back tomorrow if
asked, but his co-worker said he would prefer a more earthbound
assignment.
“This job’s given me everything for my family, everything for me,” Juan
Lizama said when asked if he would go back to washing windows at the
nation’s tallest skyscraper after being stuck there Wednesday. “That’s
why I say God bless America. I’m very happy to be here.”
Juan Lizama (L) and Juan Lopez (Reuters)
Lizama’s co-worker Juan Lopez noted not every window washer has to work hundreds of feet (metres) in the air.
“Ground-floor jobs. ... I will probably do that,” Lopez said.
The scaffold carrying Lizama and Lopez plunged into an almost vertical
position outside the 104-floor tower when a cable suddenly loosened.
Firefighters used diamond cutters to saw through a double-layered window
and pull the men to safety after more than an hour. Lizama and Lopez
were examined at a hospital and released.
The dramatic rescue came a little more than a week after the building officially opend
Both men said they panicked at first, but knew they would be safe once they saw firefighters.
Lizama said he panicked a little when the scaffold started tilting 68
stories up, but “we were always in control of the situation.” Lizama
said he used his mobile phone to call his wife and tell her he was fine.
Lizama, 41, and Lopez, 33, spoke in both English and Spanish at the
news conference at the offices of their union, Local 32BJ of the Service
Employees International Union.
They stressed the importance of their safety training.
Union officials deflected questions about the cause of the accident, which is under investigation.
John McDermott, head of the contractor that employs Lizama and Lopez,
Upgrade Services LLC, said that by following safety protocols the men
protected everyone on the ground as well as themselves.
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