This article produces a very interesting insight into the decision making process regarding the examination / disposition of the steel from the towers.
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/10/02/science/scarred-steel-holds-clues-and-remedies.html?pagewanted=all
It was published on Tuesday, Oct 2, 2001. Which means that it was written on Monday, Oct 1, 2001. In the article, the writer, Mr. Chang, states that:
Kenneth Chang said:
Dr. Astaneh-Asl and other engineers had assumed that the estimated 310,000 tons of steel columns and beams were being taken to Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island with the rest of the debris, to be sifted by investigators.
But because the steel provides no clues to the criminal investigation, New York City started sending it to recyclers.
City officials, enmeshed with the more pressing priority of recovering bodies, did not realize that structural engineers would be keenly interested in the twisted metal. Because of crossed communications, a request by the civil engineers' society did not reach city officials until Friday.
The city's Department of Design and Construction has now approved the request, and James Rossberg, director of the civil engineering society's Structural Engineering Institute, said he hoped the team would be able to visit the site this week.
A request to redirect the disposition of over 300,000 tons of steel reached city official on Friday (presumably Sept. 28, 2001, 17 days after the attack), and by the following Monday (Oct 1, 2001), the government had already made a decision granting that request.
This well may be the fastest decision that I have ever seen out of a governmental body. Other than approving their own pay raises, of course.
[Nah, I have to take that back. Every time they discuss their own pay raises, they go thru a massive, very public, and entirely insincere, display of self-examination & angst over the question. And only then approve it.]
Quite a bit of a different story than the "truther common knowledge" of the "rush to dispose of the steel".
Tom
PS. It's also interesting that, at the end of the article, Chang quotes Asteneh-Asl as saying ''For the sake of those 6,000 people,'' he said, ''we should learn something about it.''
3 weeks after the event, they still thought that 6,000 people had died. Or, perhaps, all initial statements are unassailably flawless, and all later "corrections" are manifestations of the cover-up...?