Weekend Flick Pick: Port Authority at the Movies Starring, “The HOLLAND TUNNEL”

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By Gregory Quinn, Special to the Port Authority

Here’s a story only Hollywood could conjure: An upstate waste management company looking to illegally dispose of its toxins enters the Holland Tunnel at the same time as a struggling playwright, a mountain-climbing enthusiast and a group of diamond thieves on the run from the NYPD. Naturally, tragedy ensues, the tunnel is closed off, and only Sly Stallone (naturally) can come to the rescue.

We are talking of course of the 1996 critical flop, Daylight. We never said every movie featuring beloved Port Authority infrastucture was going to be a masterpiece.  The late film critic Roger Ebert said, “Daylight is the cinematic equivalent of a golden oldies station, where you never encounter anything you haven’t grown to love over the years.  At one point when a trapped civilian asks [Stallone] if they have a chance, I expected him to say, calm down lady.  I’ve done this in a dozen other movies.”

No disrespect to Rocky and his typically stoic performance, but the real star of this movie is the Holland Tunnel, which serves as both backdrop and antagonist, its darkened, foreboding interior presenting a fearsome foe for Stallone and his roving band of survivors. And while the plot of the movie is about as believable as a traffic-free NYC commute, there’s some old-fashioned escapist fun to be had in Daylight.

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When the Party’s Over at Red Hook . . . (before it ever begins)

By Roz Hamlett, Portfolio Editor

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What’s the story on that abandoned grain elevator in Red Hook at the foot of Columbia Street, adjacent to the Erie Basin, at the mouth of the Gowanus Canal – the one that looms off the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway as a reminder of a different American economic era? After all, a massive 12-story, 430-foot-long grain terminal with silos reaching into the sky didn’t just grow in Brooklyn without good reason, . . . right?

This once magnificent, but doomed Grande Dame of grain terminals is a throwback to the years of the Industrial Revolution (1840 – 1920) on Brooklyn’s waterfront.  Once the heyday ended, the terminal was constructed and transferred eventually to Port Authority ownership for 50 years or so from 1944 to 1997, and even managed to generate a profit for a few years.

Alas, not even the Port Authority could salvage the terminal when the barge canal system on which it depended collapsed.  Looking back, it’s so easy to read the handwriting on the wall as far back as the 1900s when the original Erie Canal ambitiously was expanded.

So here’s the back story on the New York Port Authority Grain Terminal. . .

To fully grasp what happened, you have to understand the building of the original Erie Canal in 1825 was the first real game-changer in this region.  There were no railways yet.  No steamships.  New York City depended entirely on quadrupeds for food and supplies – that’s horses, donkeys, mules, oh my.

The Erie Canal solidified NYC’s place as economic powerhouse and the financial capital of the world.  The canal transported thousands of barrels of grain a day from America’s heartland through the Port of New York.  (New Jersey’s glory port days would come later with containerization starting in the mid-20th century.) Other ports like Montreal, Philadelphia and gulf ports such as New Orleans and Galveston couldn’t compete.

Throughout the rest of the 19th century, New York invested heavily to modernize an aging and narrow Erie Canal with a new expanded system of canals.

Fast-forward to 1922:  That was the year New York built the grain terminal to serve the new Barge Canal system, which unfortunately by then already was struggling along at a fraction of its capacity – one million bushels of grain compared to 30 million bushels during its heyday in 1880.

“Why on earth would we do that?” a reasonable person might ask, when the canal system was already underwater?

Because the two existing grain elevators in New York City were owned by the railroad, which denied storage privileges to barge operators.  The barges would sit for weeks swollen with grain waiting for steamships to carry the cargo across the Atlantic or down the East Coast.

New York’s answer to the dilemma:  Build the biggest, most bodacious grain terminal anywhere in the world, what else?  Why, a new terminal could move 200 million bushels of grain a day!  Giant steamships could take on massive grain, and come and go practically in the wink of an eye!

Yet it soon became painfully clear that the grain terminal would never be as successful as first imagined.  On the terminal’s opening day, then-New York Governor Nathan Miller made the most of the magnificent boondoggle remarking, “Even if the barge canal were never used in normal times, it’s a good thing to have in case of emergencies.”

Now under private ownership having been divested by the Port Authority, plans discussed include reusing it as a recycling plant, a concrete storage facility and a movie studio.  But for now, the building sits abandoned, an aging but fascinating monument to an earlier age of commerce.

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This is a drill. This is only a drill.

By Cheryl Albiez, Port Authority Media Relations

From a distance, the realistic, but staged scene at Stewart International Airport mirrors the devastating aftermath of an actual airplane accident:  the charred remains of a fuselage, thick black smoke, the acrid smell of jet fuel heavy in the air. Flashing red lights and blaring sirens. Injured victims strewn randomly on the ground.

This is a drill, fortunately – only a drill.

Center stage at this mock mayhem on a Saturday morning in May, first responders clad in white protective gear pump water onto a fiercely burning fire in hopes of quickly bringing it under control.  Barely audible above the din, a young man playing one of those injured  screams as medical personnel hoist him carefully onto a stretcher, so as not to cause him further injury had this been the real deal.

These are not actors in a movie shoot.  At least not the celebrity kind who strut their stuff on the red carpet and win Oscars for their performances.  Although deserving of a nod from the Academy for their vivid and realistic portrayals of injured passengers, these actor/student volunteers hail from institutions around the region:  Orange/Ulster Boards of Cooperative Educational Services, Newburgh Free Academy-Junior ROTC, Orange County Medical Reserves, Red Tail Youth Flying Group and the Monroe Woodbury Middle School.

Terrifying plane crashes are tried and true storylines for big-ticket blockbusters, but in the real world the prospect of even a minor emergency is taken very seriously at the Port Authority – which is why the agency has invested billions in security at its facilities.

That investment has included the staging of full-scale exercises like the one at Stewart International that enables facility personnel, agency partners and local emergency organizations important opportunities to train together under different emergency scenarios.

The Port Authority’s Office of Emergency Management creates these exercises as faithfully as possible to the real thing – replete with live fire, mock casualties, first responders, medical support teams and a command structure – not to entertain movie goers and win awards, but to potentially save lives by practicing on a regular basis.

These warriors spring into action to face down fierce flames and assist injured people as dress rehearsal for what occurs in real emergencies. So if and when that time arrives, they stand prepared and ready to be heroes.

Drill participants at Stewart included the New York National Guard, the New York State Police, JetBlue Airways staff, U.S. federal law enforcement agencies and several mutual aid fire departments and EMS.

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