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Todd Saunders, 48, who runs his own printing business from his Midtown apartment a few days a week, said he relies on building workers for his livelihood, getting him packages that messengers deliver every day. Without the workers, "anything that comes through the front door" wouldn't get to him, he said. But other doormen say relations are less rosy between tenants and those who toil in their lobbies. Edgar Correa, a bulldog of a doorman who has worked for more than 12 years at a building on Manhattan's Upper West Side, said residents "talk down" to him and hardly ever thank him. "The people don't appreciate what you do for them," said Correa, 52. "They want things their way." But many speak of their role as so important their presence could mean life or death to their building's residents.
Carlos Pellecier Jr., 50, has been a doorman at a building on Riverside Drive for 28 years. He said he once helped an elderly tenant who had suffered a stroke. Pellecier said the man buzzed him in the lobby, and he ran upstairs to the man's apartment, managing to get inside with an extra key. "If I wasn't on duty, it wouldn't have been a good outcome for him," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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