On Monday, the twenty second anniversary of 9/11, police and hearth departments round Santa Barbara County will maintain ceremonies to recollect the deadliest terror assault on American soil and honor the two,977 lives misplaced on September 11, 2001.
Santa Barbara County Hearth is extending an invite for the general public to hitch them at any of their 16 hearth stations at 9 a.m. for a second of silence and decreasing of the flag, as a solemn act to “honor lives misplaced on 9/11 and acknowledge the enduring ache of households, mates, and communities left behind.”
Within the Metropolis of Santa Barbara, the town’s police and hearth departments will host a 30-minute ceremony at 8:30 a.m. on the entrance steps of the Police Division, positioned at 215 East Figueroa Road, to pause and pay tribute to the lives misplaced within the devastation and to those that contributed to heroic rescue-recovery efforts that adopted.
The town’s ceremony will embrace a joint SBPD and SBFD Honor Guard flag ceremony, the nationwide anthem sung by retired SBPD Sergeant David Gonzales, and remarks from Mayor Randy Rowse, Hearth Chief Chris Mailes, and Police Chief Kelly Gordon.
They encourage the neighborhood to hitch them to “reaffirm the values of resilience, power, and solidarity that outline our neighborhood.”
In Montecito, the Montecito Hearth Division will maintain temporary ceremonies at each Hearth Station 91, 595 San Ysidro Highway, and Station 92, 2300 Sycamore Canyon Highway. Montecito firefighters invite neighborhood members to collect with them at both hearth station for a bell ringing, second of silence, and decreasing of the flag. The ceremony will start at 6:55 a.m. and conclude at roughly 7:05 a.m.