After
a Window Washer’s 47-Floor Plunge, the Big Question Is: How Did He
Survive?
By
JAMES
BARRON and AL
BAKER
Published:
December 12, 2007
A
29-year-old man plunges 17 stories in the atrium of a hotel in
Minneapolis, landing on an overhang.
A
22-year-old amateur sky diver goes into free fall more than a mile
above the earth when his main parachute and reserve chute fail to
open. He lands in a three-foot-deep duck pond.
Both
men survived.
The
question of why was echoed when a window-washing platform gave way on
Friday and two brothers preparing to clean the black-glass skin of an
apartment building on the Upper East Side fell 47 floors. Why did one
die and the other survive, though he is grievously injured?
Five
days later, the answer can still be only guessed at. Officials and
window-washing colleagues of the two brothers speculated that they
tried to ride their platform to the ground, as one window washer said
he had been trained to do in such an accident.
If
so, they were relying on basic physics — the platform would have
generated some small amount of wind resistance, slowing the fall —
and luck.
Fortune,
if there is any to be found, was with the brother who survived,
Alcides Moreno, 37. He was conscious and sitting up soon after
firefighters arrived.
“He
was on top of what was left of the platform that they were working
on,” said one official who was at the scene.
The
brother who was killed, Edgar Moreno, 30, may have been thrown off the
platform as it hurtled toward the ground. The official, who did not
want to be identified because he was not authorized to speak about the
investigation, said part of his body was under the platform.
It
was a distinctly urban kind of tragedy, one that brought to mind a
distinctly different kind of accident — long-distance falls by
military pilots or sky divers whose parachutes failed to open, and who
survived.
It
was also distinctly different from the case of Joshua Hanson, a
Wisconsin bar owner who survived another harrowing fall. He crashed
through a window on the 17th floor of a Minneapolis hotel in January
after what a police spokeswoman described to The St. Paul Pioneer
Press as a little “tomfoolery and a little too much to drink.” He
broke a leg and his lungs collapsed, but he left the hospital after
seven days.
“I’m
doing fine,” he said this week.
Just
as Mr. Hanson’s friends marveled at his recovery, experienced
rescuers were still marveling on Tuesday at Alcides Moreno’s
survival.
“It
is nothing short of a miracle — nothing short of a miracle — to
fall from that height and still be, well, to still be alive,” said
Deputy Chief Thomas E. McKavanagh of Division 3, an operational
commander on the scene after the accident and a 28-year veteran of the
Fire Department.
Alcides
Moreno was in critical condition at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill
Cornell hospital in Manhattan on Tuesday, and hospital officials
have refused to discuss details of his condition.
Relatives
said over the weekend that Mr. Moreno’s injuries included collapsed
lungs, damaged kidneys and bone fractures. His wife, Rosario, said at
her home that his face looked good, considering what happened. He has
a broken nose and a gash above one eye, she said, adding, “We’re
taking it day by day.”
The
doctors have not been able to explain how her husband managed to
survive because, Ms. Moreno said, they had never treated such a case.
“They’ve never dealt with anything like this,” she said.
“They’re learning from it.” She said they had not given her a
prognosis.
The
brothers were employed by City Wide Window Cleaning and were working
at the Solow Tower, at 265 East 66th Street, at Second Avenue, when
the scaffold gave way. Vincente Bustamante, 35, a good friend of both
Moreno brothers and himself a window washer for 12 years, said he
believed that Alcides Moreno survived because he followed the training
window washers receive when they learn their job.
Window
washers are taught that if a scaffold gives way, they should lie down
flat on the platform, on their stomach because, Mr. Bustamante said,
it gives them the best chance of survival should the scaffold catch on
something on the way down. Maybe that is what Alcides Moreno did, he
said.
“If
you go over, that’s it,” he said. “You’re dead.”
He
believed that that was what happened to Edgar Moreno — that he was
either thrown from the platform, or jumped from it out of fear.
“That’s your first instinct, because you’re scared — to
jump,” Mr. Bustamante said.
It
was not clear how much training the Morenos had received. The city
requires people who work on a suspended scaffold to have a certificate
showing they have completed a safety course. The city also requires
each contractor to have a licensed master or special rigger, who can
designate a foreman to oversee a job.
Local
32BJ of the Service
Employees International Union, which represents unionized window
washers in Manhattan, provides a weekly course over 18 months. Matthew
Nerzig, a spokesman for the union, said the course is supposed to
supplement 3,000 hours of apprentice work. He said there are no
specific state requirements for window washers, but tradesmen are
supposed to have 2,000 hours as apprentices and 180 hours of classroom
training.
But
the company the Morenos were working for, City Wide Window Cleaning of
Jamaica, Queens, is not a union company. The company has not returned
calls since the accident, and Ms. Moreno said no one from City Wide
had called her to express condolences.
At
least two agencies are investigating the accident — the city’s
Buildings Department and the federal Occupational
Safety and Health Administration.
Chief
McKavanagh, who was helping to oversee the rescue, said it appeared
that lightweight material on the platform may have absorbed some of
the blow for Alcides Moreno. It may have acted as a sort of shock
absorber, he said.
“If
they both rode it down, which is quite possible, God bless them if
they had the wherewithal to continue to hold on,” Chief McKavanagh
said. “That is incredible.”
“It
is a horrible story,” he continued, adding that if Mr. Moreno lives,
“that will be a miracle.”
“I
do not like to use that word so often,” he said, “but this is."
Nate
Schweber contributed reporting.