Thursday, October 02, 2008
Mayor sorry for 9/11 remark
Bowers said his intent did not come across well in linking the market building's closure to 9/11.
Roanoke Mayor David Bowers issued an apology Wednesday for comparing the closure of the Roanoke City Market building to the September 2001 terrorist attacks.
Bowers' statement came during a discussion of the market building during a city council retreat Tuesday.
Bowers said, "To me it's very much like 9/11, I guess, in the sense that you had this catastrophe and people had to have hope after it."
Bowers said he read the quote in The Roanoke Times on Wednesday and had a "gut-wrenching reaction," which prompted him to issue the following statement:
"I sincerely apologize to anyone who was offended by my comments regarding the city market building and the 9/11 catastrophe.
"In no way did I mean to imply the calamity we're witnessing at the city market is in any way comparable to the tragic loss of life and terrorism of the 9/11 catastrophe. I'm very sorry for any connection in that regard.
"What I was trying to imply was that no matter what problem we face, including this calamity at the city market building, when we get beyond a certain point we need to try and rebuild confidence and have hope and try to demonstrate some success."
The market building was closed Sept. 19 after the Virginia Department of Health yanked all 10 vendors' licenses because inspectors found live mice, dead mice, mouse droppings and evidence of related food contamination.





