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Volume 6.8

Come Experience Auburn’s second “First Friday” event happening August 5th from 5 – 8PM

Oak & Vine at Springside Inn

9-11 Sculpture will be Unveiled at 10th Anniversary City Hall Event

Mark the Calendar for the City of Auburn’s 3rd Annual Founder’s Day Festival August 13th

TwiST’ing the Summer Away: Teachers Learn Innovative Mapping Tools for use in the Classroom

Grand Opening set for Friends of Hospice of the Finger Lakes Thrift Shop

9-11 Sculpture will be Unveiled at 10th Anniversary City Hall Event

A piece of the World Trade Center destroyed in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks will have its final resting place in Auburn, where local firefighters will make it a key piece in a new monument honoring those who lost their lives that day.

Sam Giannettino, a member of the Fire and Iron motorcycle club, whose members consist of firefighters, said the group drove to Newark, N.J., to get a piece of steel column from the towers. The motorcycle group, plus one Chevrolet Tahoe used to move the piece, escorted the column fragment back to Auburn.

When the monument is complete, it will be unveiled during the city and county’s 10-year anniversary ceremony held to honor those killed during the terrorist attacks. The monument, which will be located at City Hall, will include memorials for the Pentagon, the two World Trade Center towers and the two airliners that were flown into them, and Flight 93, which crashed in Pennsylvania.

“It obviously hit us pretty close to home as firefighters,” Giannettino said, referring to the firefighters and other emergency personnel killed when the towers collapsed after being struck by the airliners. “Just being able to get any piece for this monument, we were ecstatic. We really didn’t think we would get anything. We thought we would have to make a plan B.”

More than 5,000 applications were sent in by various organizations that wanted a piece of the towers, but only 1,500 were accepted, Giannettino said. The firefighters traveled to Newark Liberty International Airport to get the piece out of Hanger 17, Giannettino said. The hanger is closed to the public and media, and the firefighters will only be allowed in the hanger long enough to get the piece.

“It’s very strict, only certain people are allowed to go into the hanger,” Giannettino said. “We have to go in and go out. It’s pretty sacred to them down there, and it is to us here too.”

—Provided by Citizen Reporter Nate Robson