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Thousands of baggage screeners will lose their jobs - including more than 300 at two airports where the Sept. 11 terrorists boarded planes, federal officials said yesterday. The reduction of 6,000 screeners by Sept. 30 comes less than a year after a big push to boost airport security nationwide by hiring more than 55,000. "We think this can be done while we sustain customer service and maintain the level of security that our screeners have come to contribute," John Shkor, chief operation officer for the federal Transportation Security Administration. Shkor said reducing the number of screeners nationwide by 11% would save the agency about $280 million. Its proposed 2004 budget is $4.8 billion. He said the layoffs will come in two phases beginning May 30 - and warned that air travelers could face longer lines at airports starting June 1. Shkor made the announcement at Newark Airport, where terrorists armed with box cutters boarded United Flight 93 on Sept. 11, 2001. The plane crashed in Pennsylvania after passengers fought back. The cuts will cost Newark 273 screeners, reducing the staff to 1,032, officials said. Boston's Logan Airport will lose 50 screeners, decreasing its baggage-screening staff to 1,047. Logan is where terrorists boarded American Airlines Flight 11, which crashed into the north tower of the World Trade Center, and United Flight 175, which crashed into the south tower. Kennedy Airport, which has 1,793 screeners, will lose 393. LaGuardia's screening staff will be reduced to 783 from 819. Passengers irked Shkor said the agency will to keep its best baggage screeners by basing the cuts on performance, not seniority. One screener who spoke on condition of anonymity at Kennedy Airport said "people are worried" for their jobs. Passengers called the cuts a bad idea. "I don't think it's good because there have been incidents where you still had people going on planes with knives," said Jason Roth, 41, of the upper West Side, who was flying to Argentina from Kennedy yesterday. "I'd prefer to be safe than sorry," said Sitabai Mohan, 55, who was flying home to Singapore.
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WASHINGTONSen. Alfonse D'Amato (R-N.Y.) upbraided a Clinton administration official yesterday over the state's "intolerable" 15-month wait to get changes in its Medicaid program approved. Gov. Pataki asked the Department of Health and Human Services in March 1995 for a waiver so the state could shift Medicaid recipients into managed-care programs. The move would save the state billions in the long run. The request still is pending. D'Amato blasted HHS Secretary Donna Shalala as she appeared at a Senate Finance Committee hearing on welfare and Medicaid reform: "Why has this taken so long? . . . It's apparent we've hit a bureaucratic wall."Shalala, who noted that HHS has granted 12 other states waivers, said Albany's request is the largest ever sought. She said New York wants to "move very quickly large numbers of its population into managed care" in a state where that system is relatively new. "Every state that we've worked with, everybody wants to move too quickly," Shalala said. "What we don't want is a disaster on our hands in New York." A frustrated D'Amato said, "You're going to study this to death. . . . They have answered these questions, and you keep raising more questions." Shalala also got an earful from Sen. Daniel Moynihan (D-N.Y.), who has asked the administration to specify how many children would be forced into poverty by welfare changes it backs. "I cannot imagine the President will sign any legislation that would cast a million children in poverty"as a bill Clinton embraced last year would have, Moynihan said.
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The eight Emergency Medical Service workers who died 67 days ago when the World Trade Center collapsed were remembered yesterday for their courage, compassion and self-sacrifice. "Most New Yorkers do not know them, but all New Yorkers owe them," said Randy Daniels, New York's secretary of state. "It is a debt we cannot repay." The eight EMS workers who died Sept. 11 are Yamel Merino, Carlos Lillo, Keith Fairben, Richard Pearlman, Ricardo Quinn, Mark Schwartz, Mario Santoro and David Marc Sullins. "They redefined what means," Daniels said. "It is a word loosely tossed around these days. But after Sept. 11 we know what a hero is in America." "Heroes are ordinary people who do extraordinary things," Daniels said. "These eight did extraordinary things." Family and colleagues attend The memorial service, held at Jacob Javits Convention Center, drew nearly 600 people, including families of victims, their colleagues, and emergency medical technicians from Washington, Kentucky, Florida, Mississippi, Illinois and California. Edward Cardinal Egan attended briefly. EMT Ron Sonoda, 40, traveled from his hometown near Toronto to present a $10,402 check to the Greater New York Hospital Association Fund for families of paramedics and EMS workers. "I wanted to let them know we cared," Sonoda said. Rabbi Joseph Potasnik, an FDNY chaplain, urged those assembled to light two candles on Thanksgiving Day - one to recall those who gave their lives, and the other as a symbol of hope. "Let's light those candles and continue to bring love and light into the lives of other people," Potasnik said. During the service, video tributes displayed images of victims along with their names. Once the nearly two-hour tribute was over, many friends and families wiped their tears and tried to manage their grief. "It's very hard to see the pictures," said Gabriella Jager Sierra, 25, whose sister, Yamel Merino, perished outside a triage center when the South Tower collapsed. Merino, 24, left behind a son, Kevin, 7, who was photographed weeping on top of his mother's coffin at her funeral. "I've put the clippings under the bed, and I don't want to look at them for a while," she said.
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