Crime & Safety

Summit First Aid Volunteer Killed in 9/11 to Be Honored With Artifact

The Lt. Gov. and officials from the Port Authority will come to Summit next week to honor Ian Thompson and a World Trade Center beam given to the First Aid Squad.

The Lieutenant Governor of NJ Kim Guadagno and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey will be visiting the Summit Volunteer First Aid Squad on Friday, September 28th at 1:30 pm to do a formal presentation of our World Trade Center artifact.

Squad Captain Kari Phair submitted an application on behalf of the Squad to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey last year.  The Squad was selected based on their significant response to the September 11, 2001 tragedy in the hours and days that followed and the fact that an active member of the Squad, Ian Thompson was lost in the attack. 

The section of steel I-beam which measures 19” long x 12” wide x 11” tall and weighs 110 lbs, has been set up as a memorial to Ian.

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Squad members Mike D’Ecclessiss and Kari Phair drove to Kennedy Airport to pick up the artifact.

On Tuesday morning, September 11, 2001, The Summit First Aid Squad received the request for assistance from New York City just before 10 AM.  Within the hour, they would receive a request for an additional ambulance crew at Liberty State Park as well as assistance in treating numerous train passengers headed from New York to Summit. 

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Over 40 off duty members answered the call for help that day.  The Squad was able to borrow an additional 3 ambulances from a local dealer and staffed all six units, evaluating and treating over 600 people as they stepped off trains at the Summit station.  In the days that followed, 14 Summit First Aid Squad volunteers participated in the rescue/recovery operation at the WTC site.

Ian Thompson had been a volunteer EMT with the Squad for 6-1/2 years and worked in the World Trade Center.  It is believed that Ian may have been attempting to help others at the time he was lost, just as he had done during the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.  As a result, his tragic loss was declared a line of duty death by the NJ Commissioner of Health.  Since that time, both of Ian’s daughters have also served as volunteers with the Squad.

—John Staunton

Squad Captain Kari Phair  also contributed to this article.


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