NYC respects important workers in the parade up of the Canyon of Heroes – News2IN
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NYC respects important workers in the parade up of the Canyon of Heroes

NYC respects important workers in the parade up of the Canyon of Heroes
Written by news2in

New York: Essential Workers who helped New York City through the Covid-19 pandemic Wednesday Respected Wednesday with Parade Up Broadway, Nurses, Doctors, First Respondents, Teachers, Bus Drivers, and more up float through the canyon of the tall buildings and falls confetti.
Parade stretches from Battery Park to City Hall, leads Broadway in Manhattan Lower by Grand Marshal Sandra Lindsay, a health care worker who is the first person in the country to get a Covid-19 vaccine shot.
“What a difference is a year,” Lindsay said.
“Fifteen months ago, we were in a much different place but thanks to heroic efforts from so many health care workers, first respondents, frontline workers, people who gave us, people who put their lives, we got ‘ .
Thank you enough, “he said.
The important working parade Wednesday is the latest in the 205-year New York City tradition.
The same type of celebration, known as the Ticker-tape parade for thin paper ribbons used for marching shower, has been held in the past to celebrate soldiers, astronauts and championship sports teams.
The last parade along the iconic stretch known as the canyon of the hero respected the US women’s football team for their 2019 World Cup victory.
“We have many things to be appreciated, because we are underway in our recovery.
We have many things to celebrate and we have many people to celebrate,” said Mayor Bill De Balasio, who horsed to the parade on buoy with hospital employees and Mr.
, Mets, the New York Mass Mascot.
“They deserve to march in the canyon of the hero, because it is something that is provided for the greatest people in history.
Well, here are some people who make history at the hardest hour of New York City,” he said.
Justin Davis, a nurse who came from Pittsburgh to work at Manhattan Hospital during the peak of the crisis last year, was eager to drive a parade in a float sponsored by Amn Healthcare, his staff company worked.
“I think it will only be cool,” Davis said.
“And hopefully it can bring closure.” Davis, a 43-year-old military veteran, said he came to New York City when it was a center of pandemic, leaving his wife and three small children behind, “because I want to do something to make my family proud.” Parade gave the Davis family and a large number of New York residents the opportunity to express their pride and gratitude to Him and other important workers.
“This is a very big thing,” said his wife, Jennifer Davis.
“This is amazing.
We just have to come here and be here for him, to support it and celebrate it.” High temperatures this week has cut celebrations.
Initially, a ceremony at the City Hall was scheduled to follow the parade.
Instead, De Blasio and his wife will praise the participants at the end of the route.
Water will be available through routes and cooling stations for participants will be at the beginning and end.
Labor disputes have also cut plans.
Some EMS workers plan to boycott the parade to protest what their union said was a low salary.
A union representing workers in the health sector said it missed the parade during the end of the worker’s important salary and the lack of early retirement incentives for its members, which included social workers and trackers contact.

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