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Two small planes collided in midair over southern New Jersey yesterday, killing all 11 passengers and crew on the aircraft but sparing people on the ground, authorities said. No one was injured in the Burlington Township subdivision where the planes came down, even though one aircraft, a Piper Navajo, crashed into a house and set it on fire. "Another few feet and it would have been in my ear," said Ed Trzaskawka, whose two-story brick-front home was destroyed. Trzaskawka, his wife, Cathy, and their dog escaped by running out the back door. The Navajo, which carried seven passengers and two crew members, was a shuttle contracted by the Navy to transport civilian workers from the Lakehurst Naval Air Engineering Station in New Jersey to the Patuxent River Naval Air Station in Maryland. Two of the passengers boarded during a stopover at Mercer County Airport. The other plane, a Piper Seminole, had departed from Northeast Philadelphia Airport with a flight instructor, who was a police officer, and a student to do training exercises. The plane and the bodies were recovered in a soybean field a half-mile north of the crash site in the Steeplechase development. The 8 a.m. collision sent neighbors running as pieces of the aircraft rained down on the area. "I saw a mushroom cloud and heard debris falling around the house. There was so much debris in the air it looked like a tornado," said Steve Cotterman, 48. He said he dashed out of his house to see what had happened and stumbled on a gruesome trail of wreckage that included body parts. "It sounded like really bad thunder, and then there was a huge bang," said neighbor Kim Varava, 29, who described the Trzaskawka house as "all flames, tons and tons of fire, the whole garage." Varava said it was a miracle no one on the ground was hurt, especially because there are so many children in the area. "If you just look on the street, there's tons of engine parts. Any one of them could have hit a kid," she said. The flight instructor was identified as Craig Robinson, 28, a Washington Township police officer. He is survived by his wife, Tara, and a 7-month-old son. Burlington Township police said the remains of the other victims, nine men and a woman, also had been identified. Five of the bodies from the Navajo were recovered from the crash site at the Trzaskawka home, three were found in an athletic field and another fell through the roof of a garage a block away, according to New Jersey State Police Maj. Barry Roberson. The National Transportation Safety Board was investigating. The National Weather Service said skies were cloudy with visibility of 10 miles at the time of the crash.
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When alleged mobster Michael (Big Mike) LaBarbara Jr. ruled the roost in Long Island's most powerful construction union, his free-spending ways included a palatial office with sauna, private elevator and a planned golf course. On Friday, in Nassau County Federal Court, the bill came due. Saying that a multi-million-dollar embezzlement scheme concocted by LaBarbara had been "disastrous" to the union, Judge Arthur Spatt sentenced the alleged Luchese crime family member to nine years in prison. "This was the most brazen case of labor racketeering I've seen," said Roger Garay, investigator for the federal Office of Labor Racketeering. "LaBarbara basically stole the union's headquarters." The sentence was greeted with quiet cheers by union dissidents who have long battled LaBarbara and other alleged mobsters over control of the 2,500-member General Laborers Union Local 66. "They raped the union," said Barney Scanlon, a 30-year veteran rank-and-filelaborer. Spatt also ordered LaBarbara, 59, to make restitution to the union of $8.3 million, representing the total amount that LaBarbara allegedly fleeced from union members who do much of the grunt work on construction sites. In a stinging tone, Spatt detailed how LaBarbara, while serving as business manager for Local 66 in the late 1980s, had arranged for a corrupt contractor to build a union training center at wildly inflated costs, with union benefit funds picking up most of the $4.6 million tab. The scheme included a 2,000-square-foot office for LaBarbara with private kitchen and full bath with sauna. LaBarbara, an avid golfer, also commissioned a private golf course to be built on the center's 11-acre grounds in Coram, L.I., but ran out of funds. The deal also called for no-show jobs for LaBarbara's relatives and a landscaping contract for his father. The deal also did long-term damage to the union, Spatt said. Because LaBarbara provided phony benefit fund documents with union property as collateral to a bank to induce it to provide mortgage financing, the bank is now foreclosing on the union's training facility and its separate headquarters in Melville, L.I.
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The U.S. Senate's vote to boost the minimum wage sparked a wealth of reactions around the city yesterday, pleasing struggling workers and angering merchants.Nicholas Flores, a garment district employe, said that while the proposed hikes to $4.75 and then $5.15 won't make him rich, they'll certainly help him scrape by."I'm making so little now, I can really use the extra money," said Flores, 46, a recent Mexican immigrant who earns the minimum of $4.25 per hour. Johnny Gassett, 45, who unloads trucks for the minimum wage, said he gladly would take the raiseeven if he'll still have to work 50 hours a week to clear $200."It's like slave labor, but I can't do no better," said the Bronx resident. "And besides, you've got a line of fellas out there waiting to get the spot I've got."As for the hike, Gassett said: "That money is already spent. I'm just going to pay bills. Old bills." Garment district worker Marcos Ruis, 17, looked down at his FILA sneakers, splitting at the sides, and said, "Maybe I'll be able to buy a new pair of sneakers."Still, local small business owners warned that the seemingly modest wage hike would hurt bosses and workers alike, spelling lower profits and possible firings."We operate on such a low margin of profit that to have to pay our people a higher rate of salary would hit us hard," said Maria Silva, owner of Maz Mezcal, a Mexican restaurant on E. 86th St. Silva, who employs eight workers, said the increase "would eat into our minimal profit margin. "If I'm going to pay more, then I'm going for a better-qualified person, and that leaves out the high school student or inexperienced person from getting a chance," she added. Bob Cutrona, president of The Voice of Staten Island, a merchants' group, predicted layoffs and cutbacks in hours for already struggling low-wage employes. "I honestly feel this increase is going to be a hardship for many of our stores that are barely making a profit now," he said. "It's better to be employed at $4.25 than to be unemployed at $4.75," Cutrona added.
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