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2001 – John Blitch
Citation
"For his leadership in the prior development and rapid deployment of the urban
search and rescue robots used at the World Trade Center disaster."
Press Release
Full Citation
From Sept. 11 through Oct. 2, 2001, roboticists at the World Trade Center conducted the
first known robot-assisted urban search and rescue (USAR) effort in the world. The
response was organized by John Blitch, who has been working since the 1995 Oklahoma
City bombing to develop intelligent robots for USAR and establish critical relationships
with the fire rescue community. His efforts show that extraordinary vision and enduring
personal and professional commitment can make a difference to society.
Blitch began working with robots for USAR after participating in the Oklahoma City
bombing response, noting that no robots of the right size, characteristics, and intelligence
were available for search and rescue. A graduate student on leave from the Army at that
time, he changed his Master's thesis topic from planetary rovers to USAR robotics and
obtained funding from the Army AIC to evaluate possible platforms. His graduate school
efforts won him the National Institute for Urban Search and Rescue (NIUSR) High
Lonesome Award. Upon returning to Special Operations Command and then later at the
DARPA Tactical Mobile Robots program, Blitch directed efforts which developed many
of the robot platforms that were eventually used at the WTC response. He also
contributed funds to the AAAI and RoboCup Rescue robot competitions in an effort to
expose and encourage researchers and students to the challenging USAR domain. In the
meantime, he worked hard to establish relationships with key members of the USAR
community, including Ray Downey, Chief of Special Operations for the New York Fire
Department, who later died in the collapse of WTC Tower 2. Via these relationships, the
rescue community, famously skeptical of new technology, began to accept the idea of
robot-assisted search and rescue. These relationships completed the last link in the chain
from research idea to robot in the field.
Upon moving to Colorado as Vice President and Center Director for SAIC's Center for
Intelligent Robotics and Unmanned Systems (CIRUS), Blitch established the Center for
Robot-Assisted Search and Rescue (CRASAR), a NIUSR center of excellence. When
CRASAR became official on Sept. 1, 2001, DARPA donated the first generation of
tactical mobile robots to CRASAR. Within 15 minutes of the second plane crash into the
WTC, Blitch called all the roboticists and manufacturers with fieldable robots to
supplement the donated robots as he drove to NYC from Washington DC where he left
his household goods half packed for the move to Colorado. Within six hours he was met
in NY by teams from near-by industry and 18 hours after the attacks, robots were on the
rubble pile. Eventually more teams from the military and academia joined the effort
under his direction. The robots assisted FDNY and FEMA rescue workers in finding the
bodies of five victims in the first ten days in areas where neither humans nor dogs could
enter safely. The robots allowed technical search teams to find the same number of
victims in half the time of a manual search and in more dangerous or inaccessible
locations. During the later weeks of the recovery, the robots were used around the clock
by city engineers to inspect the structural integrity of basement and slurry wall structure,
finding at least three more bodies.
Blitch's efforts have been steady and unselfish. In several instances, he made career decisions based on the
impact he could have on USAR robotics rather than on future promotions. At the WTC, Blitch donated
more than $20,000 of his own savings to buy support equipment and to pay for travel and expenses of the
teams, none of which has been reimbursed. He was the only member of the CRASAR teams to stay for the
entire duration (Sept. 11-Oct. 2), leaving only after the last robot had been broken. Both personally and
professionally, he has made significant contributions to the theory and use of intelligent robots for USAR.
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