Craig Cinelli’s Role in the Cleanup Brigade
Craig Cinelli hadn’t been behind the wheel of a truck or transported a load of scrap metal for five years when 9/11 happened. However, the terrorist attacks moved him immediately into action.
Craig, then a 32-year-old vice president of CIMCO Recycling in Hackensack, N.J., was among a group of volunteers who didn’t receive widespread recognition for their assistance. In a telephone interview at the time, Cinelli shared that his primary desire was to help. “I couldn’t enlist in the Army but knew I had resources that others didn’t. It was a duty about which I felt deeply.”
After the tragedy of Sept. 11, Craig Cinelli reached out to FEMA and other government bodies but faced challenges in his efforts. He had generously offered his entire fleet of trucks for the cleanup operations. He had been thanked for each attempt to help and added to a list filled with numerous other assistance offers, but nothing was moving forward.
One Sunday morning, impatience gripping him, Cinelli had decided he couldn’t wait anymore. In the dawn hours, uncertain about the kind of response he would get, he drove one of the company’s trucks straight to where America was most in need. Upon his arrival, Cinelli was promptly pulled into service. “I was instantly taken in,” he had remarked. “There was zero delay; they checked my credentials and directed me forward. The efficiency was outstanding.”
Navigating through emergency routes, Cinelli made his way through New York’s streets. As he approached the main disaster site, he encountered multiple barriers from civilians, the military, the police, and the fire department. Reaching the core of the financial district had been emotionally taxing for him. “People were applauding all along the route,” Cinelli had recalled. “Every halt we took, volunteers gave us water, medical supplies, and other essentials. The spirit of camaraderie was incredible.”
Cinelli’s truck was stationed beside World Trade Center Building №7, where it was swiftly filled with a massive 30,000-pound I-beam retrieved from the debris. During another run, he was loaded up with 5,000 pounds of wreckage.
Originally published at https://craigcinelli.com on October 4, 2023.