9/11 prompted some to move away to new lives ‘Wake-up call’


By JENNIFER PELTZ

Associated Press

NEW YORK

On 9/11, Stephen Feuerman saw the World Trade center aflame through the window of his Empire State Building office and watched, transfixed, as a second fireball burst from the twin towers.

He ran through the 78th floor urging everyone to get out, thinking their skyscraper could be next. With transit hubs shut down, he couldn’t get home to his family in suburban Westchester for hours.

Shaken by the experience, the apparel broker, his wife and their two small children moved within four months to a gracious South Florida suburb they figured would be safer than New York.

So it was until this past Valentine’s Day, when mass violence tore into Parkland, Fla., too.

“There really is no safe place,” says Feuerman, whose children survived but lost friends in the massacre that killed 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

He still feels the family made a good move after 9/11, and he feels all the more attached to Parkland since the shooting plunged him into a whirlwind of events and advocacy on school safety and other issues.

The Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks prompted the Feuermans and an uncounted number of others to move quietly away from their lives near the hijacked-plane strikes that killed nearly 3,000 people in New York, the Pentagon and a Pennsylvania field.

With the attacks’ 17th anniversary here, The Associated Press caught up with some who left and asked: Have they found what they were looking for?

“IT REALLY MADE US HAVE A WAKE-UP CALL”

About 30 weeks a year, Scott Dacey drives from his home near New Bern, N.C., to Washington for a few days. The 350-mile trips are a price the federal lobbyist pays for peace of mind after Sept. 11.

He and his wife, Jennifer, once expected to stay in the Washington area for years. Then came the strike on the Pentagon and the new feeling of living under heavy security in northern Virginia.

“It really made us have a wake-up call: ‘How do we want to live our lives?”’ Scott says. “Do we want to be up here in this rat race of Washington, D.C.?” Or raising kids somewhere less on-guard and closer to family?

The move also opened new opportunities. Scott is a county commissioner and ran for Congress. And their children, 17 and 15, grew up in a town ranked among the state’s safest.

“YOU’RE ONLY GOING TO CHANGE YOUR LIFE WHEN THINGS ARE BAD”

There had to be a better way to live, Michael and Margery Koveleski thought.

A furniture designer, Michael sensed emotional burnout surrounding him as he worked in lower Manhattan after 9/11. Security measures lengthened his commute from Queens, devouring his time with the children. And two months after the terror attacks, American Airlines Flight 587 crashed near the Koveleskis’ home, killing 265 people.

The next spring they moved to Springfield, Ohio, where they had church friends.

If a better way, it wasn’t always smooth. It was initially a challenge for the Koveleskis’ children to be the new, mixed-race kids – Michael is white, while Margery has Haitian heritage – in an area less diverse than Queens. And Michael struggled to find work in the shaky post-9/11 economy.

He found it by founding his own business, Design Sleep, which sells natural latex mattresses and platform beds. It’s now in its 14th year.

“You’re only going to change your life when things are bad – or terrible,” Michael says. “I am thrilled at the way it came out.”

“WE TRY TO ECHO SOME OF WHAT WE LOVED”

Heather and Tom LaGarde loved New York and didn’t want to leave.

But over time, “we were very unmoored by 9/11,” Heather says. “Even though I wasn’t physically harmed, just to see it that close changes your perspective. ... Your priorities change.”

It felt harder and harder to stay in New York. Their nonprofit work depended on fundraising that lagged in the rocky economy after the attacks. Friends moved away.

At first, the ramshackle North Carolina farm they spotted online in 2002 was only going to be an occasional getaway. But in 2004, the LaGardes moved into the farm.

Having no plan evolved into starting an architectural salvage company; a popular free music series and farmers’ market; a humanitarian innovation conference; and the Haw River Ballroom, a music venue in an old mill the couple helped renovate.

“We try to echo some of what we loved” in New York, Heather says, “but living in an easier, simpler, more natural place.”

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