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Royal
Palm Beach Chiropractor Volunteers Time at Ground Zero
TOWN CRIER
Jan 10-16th, Vol 23, Number 2
by Carol
Porter
Town-Crier Staff Reporter
While many were
resting and trying to forget 2001, Royal Palm Beach
chiropractor Dr. Scott Snyder spent the week between
Christmas and New Year's working at Ground Zero in New York
City.
Snyder worked
three days for 10-hour shifts volunteering his chiropractic
services to those in need--- mostly police, fire and
sanitation officers working months of long hours at the
site.
"Many of these officers are serving 12-hour shifts, working
on pure adrenaline," Snyder said. "Certainly the stress has
been tremendous."
The unique honor
came to Snyder via an e-mail from the New York Chiropractic
Society, which sent a request to chiropractic societies
throughout the eastern seaboard asking for volunteers to
help at Ground Zero. When Snyder was contacted by a local
association director, the Royal Palm Beach doctor was eager
to help out in any way he could.
"It took a few
days for them to get back to me," said Snyder. "I had to fax
up a resume and a copy of my license and other information
about me. I was very happy when they got back to me and said
that they wanted me. So I made the necessary arrangements
with family and friends in the New York area."
Originally
supposed to travel to the New York area for a cancelled
chiropractic conference that had been scheduled for Sept.
12, Snyder took his ticket voucher and put it to good use.
Before the tragedy, Snyder's brother was often in the Twin
Towers on business. He was in the building just a week prior
to Sept. 11.
"I
am very familiar with the area," Dr. Snyder said. "I have
been there many times. I used to have lunch on the 66th
floor in the sky lobby. It was one of my favorite places in
the city."
Flying into New York City without the World Trade Center
visible was quite a shock, Snyder said. "It's very
unsettling," he explained. "You lose your point of
reference. You see the Empire State Building, but downtown
is totally different."
Once Snyder
arrived in New York City, he went to work at St. Paul's
Chapel, a church near Ground Zero designated as the
Volunteer Center by the American Red Cross. It is staffed
24-hours-a-day, seven-days-a-week. Downstairs was set up
with medical supplies and anything else that the Ground Zero
volunteers might need--- food, medical attention, and
bedding. Chiropractors, therapists, and medical doctors were
among the volunteers.
"I had a name
badge with my name (Dr. Scott Snyder, West Palm Beach), and
they sought out my services," said Snyder. "When they found
out I was from Florida, they were glad. I'm from New York
originally, but I live in Florida now. They were very
appreciative. I think they would do the same for us.
Sometimes it takes something terrible to bring out the
goodness in people."
While working at
St. Paul's, Snyder had a great deal of company. Volunteers
came from all over the New York area and the nation. There
was even one gentleman who had lost his restaurant, but was
now working at the site as the food manager.
When Snyder took
breaks from working, he would walk around the church and sit
in the pews. The whole church had been decorated with
letters, cards, and banners from children.
Snyder shared
one example: "Dear New York police or firefighter, you are
so brave to do what you're doing. Thank you so much. My
father's cousin Bill works for you. Maybe you know him. Love
Crystal."
"The depth of
emotions that are associated with this tragedy has been
enormous," Snyder said.
Snyder
received a close-up tour of Ground Zero and was able to take
some photos. Looking around, he said, you can see clearly
the effects the planes crashing into the World Trade Center
had on other buildings around them. Every window facing the
area is shattered, and the American Express Building just
west of the site has a six-floor hole in it. Building 7, a
smaller building on the north side, has been reduced to a
parking lot. From the south and west, Ground Zero resembles
catacombs at different levels. "To rebuild anything, they
will have to go down to the bedrock foundation, just like
they did in 1967," he said.
Ground Zero,
said Snyder, looks more like an archaeological dig than a
modern disaster site. Yet it remains hallowed ground--- a
very solemn place, burial ground for thousands of people.
"When they find the remains of a person, it's a very
emotional thing," he said. "they'll pull out the remains,
put them in a body bag, and put them in a coffin-like box,
which they will drape with an American flag. The body then
gets sent to the morgue for identification."
Snyder is not a
stranger to volunteering. He is well-known locally for his
work with the Royal Palm Beach Jaycees, the Royal Palm Beach
Rotary Club, and the American Cancer Society. In 2000, he
was honored by the Palms West Chamber of Commerce as "Small
Business of the Year."
While the work
at Ground Zero dominated his time in New York, Snyder did
manage a little time away from the immediate area. He got to
visit his favorite stops in Chinatown and visited different
neighborhoods in the city. The trip was quite a memorable
experience--- one he will never forget, but not one he hopes
to do again.
"I hope I never
have to see anything like this again," said Snyder. "I hope
we never se a disaster like this again."
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