Sunday, July 30, 2006

Michael Boyle at Ground Zero, a Call for Heroes

September 14, 2001

When Jimmy Boyle, retired city firefighter, first heard on Tuesday morning that a plane had hit the World Trade Center, he knew his son, Michael, a city firefighter, was supposed to be off-duty.

Michael, 37, loved politics almost as much as the fire department, and he was planning to go out to Queens from Manhattan to work on a City Council primary campaign.

But his father also knew that many firefighters look on their occupation as more than a job, and he remembered what happened when Michael fought his first fire six years ago.

He stayed at his post in the fur vault of a burning department store even though the heat got so intense it left burns all around his face mask.

"He came out exhausted, beaten," said his father, who lives in Westbury. "He said, 'It was hot, but I couldn't leave, Dad, because I wasn't supposed to.' I said, 'Mike, you did a great job.'"
Jimmy Boyle, head of the firefighters' union during the 1980s and '90s, was in Brooklyn on Tuesday, and what he knew about his son and his son's colleagues made him very worried. He set off on foot across the Brooklyn Bridge toward the World Trade Center, hoping not to find Michael.

He was right to be worried. Michael Boyle was among the 300 New York City firefighters still missing yesterday. Among them were two other firefighters - and probably many others - who also didn't really have to be there, but wound up inside the doomed towers because of their sense of duty.

One of them was David Arce, 36, who grew up in Westbury with Michael Boyle. The two had been best friends since childhood, served in the same fire company and worked together on political campaigns. Arce, also off-duty on Tuesday, had planned to go to Queens with Michael.
Marjorie Ginobbi, who lives next door to the Arce family and watched the two boys grow up, wasn't surprised David wound up in a job that involves helping people.

"Anything I needed help with, he was always there. Cutting the grass, painting, anything that needed to be carried - he was just a wonderful kid."

When he grew up, she said, "It was like he had been born to be a firefighter. He loved the work - always smiling." Arce's father, Dr. A.G. Arce, died of diabetes in February. His mother, Margaret, a geriatric nurse, said her son and Michael Boyle "were like twin brothers."
"David grew up playing with fire engines, and the desire to be a firefighter never went away," she said. "It's a typical fireman story. It was the love of his life. There's such a closeness with firefighters, a beautiful thing to watch, and the families have to accept whatever is dealt."
Perhaps the best-known firefighter who didn't have to be in the World Trade Center was Capt. Timothy Stackpole of Brooklyn. He was fighting a fire in a city-owned building in 1998 when the floor collapsed, dropping him and two firemen 10 feet into a roaring blaze. The flames burned more than 30 percent of his body.

The city agreed to pay the three $4.2 million after their lawyers argued that the city hadn't heeded warnings about the building's structural flaws. Court records don't specify the individual payments, but it was clear Stackpole could have retired with a large nest egg and a lucrative disability pension.

Instead, after two months in a hospital, he spent many painful hours in the gym rebuilding his body and went back to work as soon as he could pass a physical.

"He came back when someone else would have retired happily," Msgr. Thomas Brady, a former fire department chaplain, said. At his church, Good Shepherd Roman Catholic Church in Marine Park, Brooklyn, Stackpole taught children and counseled couples about to marry. "He was a very religious man in the best sense," Brady said.

So far this week, the monsignor said, he has heard of about eight or 10 missing firefighters whose fathers were also firefighters. "Every day I hear of more - it's in the blood."
As Jimmy Boyle searched for his son on Tuesday, he reached the World Trade Center just as one of the towers collapsed, showering the street with debris and temporarily blinding him with dust. He narrowly escaped injury by groping his way into a doorway. Finding out nothing at the scene, he went to his son's firehouse nearby and opened Michael's locker.

He found what he hoped wouldn't be there - Michael's car keys and wallet.

Later, he learned that Michael and David had jumped on a fire engine at the last minute in their civilian clothes. "If they had to die, it was fitting that they died together," Boyle's father said yesterday.

As Michael Boyle and his friend rode toward the World Trade Center on Tuesday, the burn marks from Michael's first fire six years ago were still visible on his face.
--Brian Donovan

Michael Boyle, a firefighter for the New York Fire Department, joined thedepartment in 1996 and hoped to be president of the firefighters union one day, as his father once was. James Boyle, a retired firefighter who was president of the Uniformed Firefighters Association from 1983 to 1986 and again from 1990 to 1993, spoke to his son briefly themorning of Sept. 11, then set out on foot from Brooklyn to the World Trade Center after thesecond hijacked jet struck. He was about two blocks away when Tower 2 collapsed. “It lookedlike it was 10 o’clock at night and I realized it would be a miracle if he was alive,” Boylesaid.

--The Associated Press

A Crusade for Fire Radios

New York Daily News - Monday, February 28, 2005
By ADAM LISBERG

DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER Retired firefighter Jimmy Boyle was frustrated by the FDNY's unreliable radios long before 9/11 - but after his brave son died in the terror attacks, his battle turned personal. Firefighter Michael Boyle was rescuing victims inside the north tower when FDNY brass sounded a call to evacuate. But few of the Bravest heard the orders over the patchwork of failing frequencies. Inspired by the memory of his 33-year-old son, Jimmy Boyle is bringing his fight for better radio equipment to Congress as a homeland security adviser to New York Rep. Peter King. "I was yelling for years," said Boyle, 66, who lives in Westbury, L.I. "The radios didn't work in 1993. The radios didn't work in 2001. And guess what? The radios don't work today. That really gets to me." King (R-L.I.) was named chairman of the House homeland security subcommittee on emergency preparedness this month, and has hired Boyle to help him investigate radio flaws and communication troubles that endanger rescuers. "He has such a strong personal motivation, and he has incredible sources," King said. "I'm getting a lot of advice and a lot of knowledge about the radios from Jimmy. He really knows this issue inside and out." King plans to hold hearings on the radios as soon as this spring, using the city's problems as a worst-case example of communication failures that hinder cops and firefighters nationwide. Boyle said he will not stop his campaign until better equipment is made available to firefighters, cops and other first responders. "It has to be a national effort, but New York should be where they try it out," said the gregarious 25- year FDNY veteran, who served two terms as the city firefighters union president. "I've spoken with people who were in the north tower, and they never had a sense of urgency that the collapse was imminent," Boyle said. "My son died there."