Paragraph: (Society_Law_and_Justice/oanc-Crains_New_York_Business-2.txt)
Sent 1: In her storage room-turned-office, Jennifer Baum works under an expanding leak that is causing the ceiling to turn brown and crumble.
Sent 2: Mold grows in the buckets positioned to catch the water.
Sent 3: She shrugs it off.
Sent 4: Outside her office she has taped up a clear plastic suit, and a sign that reads, "All employees must don protective gear before coming in."
Sent 5: Such is life in limbo.
Sent 6: Nearly a year after Sept. 11, the Legal Aid Society-the lawyers for New York's poor and homeless-remains, well, homeless.
Sent 7: The nonprofit has been barred from returning to its 90 Church St. headquarters, across from the World Trade Center site, because of environmental concerns.
Sent 8: Legal Aid has uncomfortable company.
Sent 9: More than 11,500 New Yorkers continue to work out of temporary space, according to analysis by Manhattan-based real estate brokerage TenantWise.com Inc. and Crain's New York Business.
Sent 10: That's 8% of the 137,000 workers who lost their offices or access to them when the Twin Towers collapsed.
Sent 11: Legal Aid's 450 displaced attorneys and staffers have spent the past 12 months spread among previously unused spaces-some unused for good reason-in the nonprofit's other offices.
Sent 12: It could be another year and a half before they return to their old desks.
Sent 13: They have contended with difficult working conditions as demand for Legal Aid's services is on the rise because of Sept. 11 and the deteriorating economy.
Sent 14: The civil division is spread among a few boroughs.
Sent 15: Their papers and documents, some 20,000 boxes worth, are stuck in a storage facility in Linden, N.J. "I am counting the days till we can have all the parts back in one place," says Steven Banks, Legal Aid's associate attorney in chief.
Sent 16: In the memories of the exiled workers, the old office has achieved mythical proportions.
Sent 17: They say the wood paneling and rugs had the ability to cool emotions and lift spirits.
Sent 18: The Legal Aid office on Montague Street in Brooklyn Heights, where 65 displaced workers have cobbled together space amid the faded and scratched walls, looks more like a bargain basement.
Question: Who put up a sign outside her office that reads: "All employees must don protective gear before coming in." (true/0)
Question: Which nonprofit organization had headquarters at 90 Church St., across from the World Trade Center site? (false/1)
Question: How much more time will it take for the workers of Legal Aid Society to return to their old offices? (true/2)
Question: The suit by Jennifer Baum's office is made of what material? (false/3)
Question: It could be another year and a half before the workers of which organization return to their old desks? (true/4)
Question: Which organization has been barred from returning to its 90 Church St. headquarters, across from the World Trade Center site, because of environmental concerns? (true/5)
Question: Where was the water caught in buckets coming from? (true/6)
Question: Outside of whose office is a sign that reads must wear protective gear before coming in? (true/7)
Question: What is the name of the non profit and where is it located? (true/8)
Question: What division has some 20,000 boxes worth of papers and documents in storage? (false/9)
Question: Why must employees wear protective gear before entering Jennifer Baum's office? (false/10)
Question: What did Jennifer Baum shrug off? (true/11)
Question: Where was the original address of the Legal Aid Society headquarters (false/12)
Question: What are some memories Legal Aid's workers recall about the old office? (true/13)
Question: What happened to some of the displaced Legal aid staff? (false/14)
Question: The 11,500 workers displaced by the Twin Towers is what percentage of 137,000 workers who lost their offices? (true/15)
Question: What type of business is the Legal Aid Society? (true/16)
Last updated: Mon Apr 16 04:55:33 EDT 2018
Generated from a file named: /Users/daniel/ideaProjects/hard-qa/split/train_456.json