Monday, April 29, 2013

Six Months After Superstorm Sandy


Six Months Report after Superstorm Sandy: From Pre-Disaster to Recovery



6 month recovery update

Timeline, milestones in response and recovery, before-and-after photos and videos plus data on disaster assistance, debris removal and other aspects of disaster operations.


Oct. 22    Tropical Storm Sandy forms.
Oct. 24    Storm strengthens to Category 1 Hurricane.
Oct. 27    Sandy weakens to Tropical Storm.
Oct. 28     Re-intensifies to Category 1 Hurricane.
Oct. 28     The President declares an emergency for the state of New Jersey.
Oct. 29     Sandy briefly strengthens to Category 2 hurricane. From Oct. 30 to Nov. 5, twenty-four states from Florida to Maine and as far west as Michigan and Wisconsin are impacted.
Oct. 29     Sandy makes landfall as a tropical storm near Brigantine, New Jersey.

IMPACTS

Mantoloking, N.J., Feb. 5, 2013 -- While some things have improved here, this house is virtually the same as it was three months ago, following Hurricane Sandy. Photo by Liz Roll/FEMA

  • New Jersey and New York take the brunt of Sandy’s assault.
  • There are 2.7 million power outages in New Jersey alone.
  • There is widespread damage to the transportation infrastructure.
  • Phone, cable and other communication lines are disrupted.
  • Operations at  2 oil refineries, 11 petroleum terminals and 2 petroleum pipelines are disrupted.
  • 8.5 million cubic yards of mixed debris which includes 2.5 million cubic yards of sand and silt deposited on road and waterways, impeding travel.
  • Houses along miles of New Jersey coastline are severely damaged or destroyed by wind and flooding.
  • More than 37,000 primary residences and approximately 9,300 rental units receive major damage.
  • Businesses in 113 of 565 New Jersey municipalities experience a combined $382 million in commercial property loss.
  • Natural gas supply lines on barrier islands are completely destroyed, sustaining an estimated $97 million in damage.
  • Within days, mold becomes a problem in unoccupied houses without electricity, creating a health hazard.

RESPONSE

Holgate, N.J., Feb. 22, 2013 -- Construction workers clear debris off mobile home parking lot in Holgate. Debris in this location is expected to be cleared soon. Rosanna Arias/FEMA

  • 2 FEMA National Incident Management Assistant Teams (IMAT) and 1 regional IMAT team report to the disaster pre-landfall.
  • 14 Emergency Support Functions, Federal Disaster Response Coordination activated.
  • 16 FEMA Mobile Communications Office Vehicles are deployed.
  • Mobile Emergency Response Support sends 34 personnel and vehicles.
  • 650 personnel from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers respond to the disaster to conduct draining of sewage treatment facilities, mobilization of 100 strike teams for debris clearance, transport and installation of generators. Team receives 335 requests for generators; 106 are installed at the peak of the emergency.
  • On Nov. 1, 2012, in the immediate response to the New Jersey disaster, FEMA’s Community Relations specialists start circulating through storm-ravaged neighborhoods to offer assistance and informational materials in nine languages. On Nov. 5, 432 specialists and 222 FEMA Corps members are in some of the most heavily impacted areas of the state.
  • Debris clearance crews remove debris from roadways and make repairs to restore power to traffic signals.
  • 520 personnel assist with tree removal, clearing 728 miles of roads and access routes.
  • 113 emergency shelters open, serving 6,477 storm survivors at the peak of the disaster.

RESPONSE AND RECOVERY

Brick, N.J., Feb. 22, 2013 -- Worker replaces roof tiles on a home damaged by Hurricane Sandy. Rosanna Arias/FEMA

As of April 23, 2013:
  • Total federal allocations for Superstorm Sandy Response and Recovery in New Jersey: 
$1.1 billion
  • Total amount approved for Housing and Other Needs Assistance: $388 million
  • Total Federal Share Obligated for Public Assistance: $262.9 million
Housing Assistance:
  • FEMA has approved more than $334 million in housing assistance grants to help repair or replace housing damaged or destroyed by Superstorm Sandy, with an average housing assistance award of $6,088 per applicant.
  • FEMA issued a mission assignment through the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to construct/renovate 114 temporary housing units at Fort Monmouth, a former military base, at an estimated cost of $3.3 million.
Individual Assistance:
  • 89,025 New Jersey residents have visited FEMA Disaster Recovery Centers.
  • More than 60,500 registrations have been approved for assistance.
  • More than 480 volunteer agencies were active in the disaster recovery effort, reporting a total of 866,400 volunteer hours which equaled nearly $24 million in work value.
  • 14 Volunteer Organizations Active in Disaster are now working on long-term recovery projects in New Jersey, including the American Red Cross, the Community Food Bank of New Jersey and Church World Service.
Other Needs Assistance:
  • FEMA approved more than $53.4 million dollars in Other Needs Assistance to 18,433 Sandy survivors.
Transitional Sheltering Assistance:
  • FEMA’s Transitional Sheltering Assistance program has provided transitional shelter to more
than 5,500 Sandy Survivors.
  • FEMA has provided a total of 195,000 room nights in 435 hotels and motels at a cost of more than $23 million, while displaced survivors developed permanent housing solutions.
Disaster Unemployment Assistance
  • 3,365 applications for disaster unemployment assistance were approved.
  • More than $4 million in disaster unemployment assistance has been provided to Sandy survivors who became unemployed as a result of the storm.
Public Assistance:
  • 1,707 requests for Public Assistance were received from the public sector and private nonprofit organizations.
  • FEMA and the New Jersey Office of Emergency Management held 1,420 kickoff meetings with eligible applicants. A kickoff meeting includes a one-on-one session that establishes the partnership among FEMA, the state and the applicant.
  • More than $262.9 million in federal share dollars has been obligated to the state of New Jersey primarily for Category A (debris removal) and Category B (emergency protective measures) assistance.
  • Ninety-nine percent of Right-of-Way debris totaling more than 8.5 million cubic yards has been removed, with the remaining 1 percent slated for removal by early May.
  • Out of 2,879 Subgrant applications, 2,051 have been obligated so far. Eligible subgrantees include state and local governments and private nonprofits such as medical, educational, utility, emergency and custodial care facilities that apply to the state for reimbursement of eligible disaster related expenditures.
  • FEMA has assisted applicants with 84 projects totaling $79 million for boardwalk and beach repair including boardwalks, emergency protective measures, marinas, bulkheads and sea walls.
  • A few projects currently under construction expected to be open to the public by Memorial Day include:
  • $19 million for the Atlantic Highlands harbor reconstruction of the marina
  • $12 million for reconstruction of the Belmar boardwalk, and
  • $7.6 million for the reconstruction of the Seaside Heights boardwalk.
Operations:
  • FEMA Operations has activated 430 Mission Assignments in support of the State in response to Superstorm Sandy and obligated $100 million in direct federal assistance and $40 million in federal operating support and technical assistance.
Mitigation:
  • Disaster Recovery Centers counseled 23,465 applicants on Mitigation techniques.
  • Mitigation conducted outreach in 28 building supply stores along the coastal area.
  • Mitigation technical assistance was provided to 406 Federal, State and local stakeholders to identify mitigation opportunities with 1,300 site visits completed to date.
  • New Jersey property owners have received $3.2 billion in National Flood Insurance Program payments for damages caused by flooding from Superstorm Sandy.

FEMA Corps:
  • In addition to extensive work with Community Relations in the recovery, thirteen FEMA Corps teams with 114 members currently are working at the New Jersey JFO.
  • Most Corps Members are working in a Public Assistance capacity. Other Corps Members are working at the JFO in External Affairs, Logistics, Planning, Individual Assistance and Federal Disaster Recovery Coordination.
External Affairs:
  • In addition to the massive neighborhood-by-neighborhood outreach effort in response to Superstorm Sandy, FEMA’s CR specialists have contacted more than 100,000 individuals, 25,000 businesses and 10,000 Faith and Community-based organizations.
  • Private Sector specialists have engaged with 555 Private Sector stakeholders, disseminating electronic disaster assistance information to 5.8 million New Jerseyans, focusing on business continuity and preparedness. The New Jersey Business and Industry Association disseminated FEMA information via utility bills to more than 21,000 members and 1.3 million employees.
  • FEMA’s Intergovernmental Affairs specialists have connected with more than 900 community leaders, handled 215 questions and referrals from mayors and other city officials, has assisted the governor’s staff in establishing a state IGA department and has worked closely with public officials on key issues such as Advisory Base Flood Elevation maps, NFIP, Repetitive Loss Inspections and other community concerns.
  • Congressional Affairs staff continues outreach activity to the New Jersey Congressional delegation and has responded to more than 775 inquiries regarding constituent issues related to Superstorm Sandy.
  • Planning and Products section has produced more than 500 individual communications including 140 news releases, 70 public service announcements, 10 recovery bulletins, 12 flyers, 5 brochures and 40 Congressional updates. FEMA Speakers Bureau has hosted 229 community events reaching 33,227 individuals with recovery information.
  • The Joint Information Center has fielded more than 9,000 media inquiries and currently averages about 28 media interviews per week. The NJ FEMA twitter handle has 3, 237 followers, has produced 780 tweets, and averages six tweets and seven re-tweets per tweet.
Small Business Administration
  • SBA has approved more than $731 million in low-interest disaster loans to homeowners, renters and businesses.
  • $606 million of that figure was loaned to residential applicants.

Then and Now

Mantoloking, N.J., Jan. 30, 2013 -- This home was knocked off its foundation during Hurricane Sandy. The owner intends to elevate and save the house. FEMA is working with state and local officials to assist residents who were affected by Hurricane Sandy. Photo by Liz Roll/FEMA
A Mantoloking home after elevation.
This Mantoloking home was knocked off its foundation by Superstorm Sandy. The homeowners chose to elevate their home to mitigate against future disasters.
Seaside Heights, N.J., Nov. 5, 2012 -- When Hurricane Sandy came ashore, it broke up the boardwalk here and left the roller coaster in the ocean. Cleanup continues, but residents are not allowed over to the barrier islands until conditions are safe. FEMA is working with many partners including federal, state, local and tribal governments, voluntary, faith-based and community-based organizations, and the private sector to assist residents impacted by Hurricane Sandy. Photo by Liz Roll/FEMA
Debris removal in Seaside Heights
In Seaside Heights, the historic boardwalk was severely damaged and debris lined the beach after Superstorm Sandy. While the iconic roller coaster remains until a contractor can remove it, the boardwalk is being rebuilt and debris has been removed from the beach.
Beach Haven inlet
Beach inlet after
Superstorm Sandy left debris strewn across this area in Beach Haven Inlet. Six month later, the area is largely free of debris.
Avon by the Sea before
Avon by the Sea after
After Superstorm Sandy, the south end of the bridge in Avon by the Sea was closed. Now, the bridge is open and structures have returned to normal.
Sandy Hook Lifeguards before
Lifeguards Sandy Hook after
The Lifeguard Station in Sandy Hook was surrounded by piles of sand after Superstorm Sandy. These piles of sand have been removed and relocated six months later.
Sea Bright, N.J., Nov. 24, 2012 -- Debris from Hurricane Sandy still awaits removal nearly a month after the storm hit. FEMA is working with state and local officials to assist residents who were affected by Hurricane Sandy. Photo by Liz Roll/FEMA
We Love Sea Bright after
After Superstorm Sandy, the lawn of a Sea Bright home was completely covered in debris. With the help of FEMA in collaboration with state and local partners, homes like this one have had debris removed from their yards.
Source of this article can be found here: FEMA.gov
Six months after Sandy: ‘Home Sweet Home’ for some, others still adrift.
Six months after Superstorm Sandy slammed into the Jersey Shore, a heavily damaged home in Mantiloking sits untouched.
By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News
BREEZY POINT, N.Y. — The construction noises are almost constant at daytime in this coastal enclave six months after Hurricane Sandy, but for many residents whose homes were badly damaged, recovery is moving at a slow pace – or not at all.
Many of those displaced by the so-called superstorm say they are stuck in limbo, trying to raise money to pay for repairs or replace their homes while coming to grips with new, federal flood-zone maps that many fear will make it too costly for them to return.
“We’re no better off than we were six months ago,” said Kieran Burke, a fire marshal who lost his home to a massive fire that erupted at the height of the storm. ” … I’d like to have an idea when I can tell my wife our children can go home.”
Burke’s dilemma is not unique to hard-hit Breezy Point, where more than 75 percent of the homes were either consumed by fire or suffered flood damage.
Some 39,000 people in New Jersey remain displaced by the storm, Gov. Chris Christie said Thursday. The number of New Yorkers still out of their homes is unclear, though federal officials said 350 households in the affected region are still getting money for hotel or motel stays.
“We’ve just got the tip of the iceberg in terms of the amount of work that needs to be done,” said Michael Byrne, the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s senior official in New York state for the Sandy response and recovery.
Though people now have some resources to rebuild, he said, they “still have some tough questions to answer … especially people that are in high-risk areas: ‘How do I rebuild?’ or ‘Do I leave, do I seek a buyout?’ So, there’s still a lot of tough issues to be worked out.”
While some neighbors are almost ready to move back home, others are still unsure how much of their property can be rebuilt following the storm.
Sandy wreaked havoc in the Caribbean before blasting ashore on Oct. 29 near Brigantine, N.J., leaving more than 100 people dead in the U.S. alone. Nearly 74,000 homes and apartments in New York and New Jersey, where it made landfall on Oct. 29, sustained damage, according to FEMA.
Some 450 homes in New York were destroyed by the storm, while approximately 46,000 in New Jersey were destroyed or sustained major damage, according to FEMA.
FEMA has given more than $1.3 billion to more than 180,000 Sandy victims in Maryland, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Jersey and New York. The National Flood Insurance Program has paid more than $7.1 billion in claims.
Some survivors whose homes sustained minor damage quickly returned home, as did some others who were able to shelter in place while they repaired and rebuilt.
But in devastated communities like the Irish-American enclave of Breezy Point, many residents had to wait for the gas, power and water to be restored and insurance funds to come through — if they did — while still paying mortgages plus rent.
“Some families and some lives have come back together quickly and well and some people are up and running,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said last week. “Some people are still very much in the midst of the recovery. You still have people in hotel rooms. You still have people doubled up. You still have people fighting with insurance companies, and for them it’s been terrible and horrendous.”
That seems a fitting description of Karly and Anthony Carozza’s situation in their neighborhood in Brick Township, N.J., which is dotted with “for sale” signs. Reconstruction work immediately ground to a halt in January, when FEMA released initial drafts of its new flood maps, which placed the community into the highest risk zone, they said.

Karly Carrozza and her husband, Anthony, can’t start the rebuilding in Brick Township, N.J., until FEMA’s flood zone map — and the guidelines that come with it — are finalized.
If the maps are finalized as drawn, residents’ homes would have to be raised 11 feet and placed on pilings. Some state residents who don’t meet the requirements could face flood insurance premiums of up to $31,000 a year, according to Gov. Christie.
“The cost to put this on pilings would not be worth the value of the house. It wouldn’t make any sense,” Anthony Carozza, 34, an equities trader, said this month of their small home on a lagoon.
But the couple would have to pay off their $300,000 mortgage if they wanted to demolish the house and start anew.
“We’re all kind of in the same boat in a sense that until they have the final maps come out we can’t make any decisions,” Karly Carozza, 36, an account executive, said.
She has joined a group of New Jersey citizens facing the same difficult choices — called Stop FEMA Now — to advocate for changes to the flood maps. They also have recently ventured to New York City to band forces with homeowners there.
She feels if they don’t act, their coastal community will never be the same.
In the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, a bill has been reintroduced in New York that would provide legal protection for architects who volunteer their services during disasters. New York Assemblyman Steve Englebright, the bill’s sponsor hopes it will be voted on by June. NBCNews.com’s Dara Brown speaks with Englebright and also Lance Brown of the American Institute of Architects about the proposal.
“You could be in the middle class and enjoy a house on the water and I just feel like that’s all going to change because a lot of the people around us who are going to walk away — their homes are worth nothing,” she said. People who could afford to put the houses up to code “are going to come in and just scoop up the property,” she added.
In the meantime, the couple is staying nearby with Karly’s parents to avoid paying rent in addition to their mortgage. Tarp and plastic cover part of the inside of their home, which took in a few feet of water.
“There’s people whose homes look much worse than ours, but it’s almost like we’re in no different of a predicament because our hands are tied,” Karly said. “We can’t make any decisions, we can’t move back. …We’re in no different a predicament today than we were the day after the storm.”
Shifting sands have covered nearly all remnants of Kieran Burke’s bungalow in Breezy Point.
The family home, which sat for decades on what were known as the “sand lanes” in this idyllic seaside community, burned to the ground with nearly 130 other residences in the fire – the largest in the city’s modern history – that was triggered by the storm.

Kieran and Jennifer Burke, with 2-year-old Kieran Jr., visit the lot where their home stood before it burned to the ground the night that Hurricane Sandy hit.
Located in one of the older parts of the private cooperative, Burke’s home, like those of his neighbors, wasn’t fronted on a city-mapped street. That means he will need approval from the NYC Board of Standards and Appeals on rebuilding plans.
The agency has vowed to expedite the process, and the Breezy Point Cooperative is working with architects to design homes that will meet expected new city building requirements, as well as those from the flood maps – a preliminary version of which should be released in the coming weeks. So Burke is still waiting to break ground.
“It’s devastating. It’s angering,” he said of the shifting planning landscape. “I’m paying a mortgage on an empty plot of land, we’re paying rent in a place that we’re displaced in, that I have no conception of when I’m going to have the ability to move out of.”
Burke, a New York City fire marshal, and his wife, Jennifer, both 40, have a two-year-old son, Kieran Junior, and they just welcomed another boy, Matthew, a little more than two weeks ago. They’ve been living in an office converted into an apartment in Yonkers, north of Manhattan and about an hour’s drive from Breezy Point.
“It doesn’t really seem to look any different than when I was here before, and I would have thought at least some of the other parts of it would have progressed a bit,” Jennifer Burke, a pharmaceutical research manager, said this month as she stood on the spot where her kitchen used to stand. “We’re just still waiting and still hoping. … The hardest part is just not knowing.”
A few blocks away, in a corner of the community facing Jamaica Bay, the Fischers have moved back into their two-story home, even though it sits amid empty lots where neighbors once lived and is still being worked on.
Christina and Barry Fischer, parents of five children, broke their lease early from a rental in northern Queens in late March because their FEMA rental aid ran out and they had expenses piling up (the FEMA money later came through).
Some painting, tiling, sanding and cabinet work is among what remains to be done on the first floor, but now their children – ranging in age from 5 to 15 – can ride their bikes on Breezy Point’s quiet streets, go to church or the store by themselves, play on the beach and catch up with friends who have returned.
When asked how it was to be home, one of the children, William, 10, exclaimed “Great!” as he snacked on Mallomars. “I can actually go outside.”

Georgia Fischer, 5, sifts sand with beach toys. She has Charcot Marie Tooth Disease, a common nerve disorder that can make it hard to walk, and apraxia, a speech disorder. Her parents had to re-arrange therapy and classes for her in the wake of the storm.
Nonetheless, the road has been hard, with Christina Fischer, 35, taking leave from her job as an adjunct professor at St. John’s University in Queens to focus on rebuilding, including battling with the insurance over money and fighting for months to get help from the city’s “Rapid Repairs” program.
That program, a first-ever federal-local initiative, offered to install free boilers, hot water heaters and do the necessary electrical work to restore power, but many who applied encountered long delays and sloppy workmanship when they did get service.
The family also has two special needs children whose classes and therapy sessions had to be re-arranged in the aftermath as people were displaced and classrooms flooded.
But the Fischers weren’t complaining in early April when a reporter met with them to take stock of how far they’d come. Tim, 7, pushed his bike through the sand, Georgia, 5, watched a movie on a computer tablet and the family dog, Scout, sat atop a pile of laundry as Barry Fischer, a 45-year-old electrician, tested out the new washer and dryer.
“The three greatest words in the English language: home sweet home,” Barry said. “There … is nothing better.”
Source of this article can be found here: NBCNEWS.com

Key figures on Superstorm Sandy, 6 months later

-The Associated Press

Flags decorate a fence Thursday, April 25, 2013, in Brick, N.J., around the burned remains of more than 60 small bungalows at Camp Osborn which were destroyed last October during Superstorm Sandy. Six months after Sandy devastated the Jersey shore and New York City and pounded coastal areas of New England, the region is dealing with a slow and frustrating, yet often hopeful, recovery. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)
Flags decorate a fence Thursday, April 25, 2013, in Brick, N.J., around the burned remains of more than 60 small bungalows at Camp Osborn which were destroyed last October during Superstorm Sandy. Six months after Sandy devastated the Jersey shore and New York City and pounded coastal areas of New England, the region is dealing with a slow and frustrating, yet often hopeful, recovery. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)
The Jet Star roller coaster rests in the ocean Thursday, April 25, 2013, in Seaside Heights, N.J., near the rebuilding of the boardwalk. Six months after Superstorm Sandy, the roller coaster that plunged off a pier in Seaside Heights is still in the ocean, although demolition plans are finally moving forward. The region is dealing with a slow and frustrating, yet often hopeful, recovery. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)
Superstorm Sandy, a hybrid of a hurricane and two cold-weather systems, struck on Oct. 29, concentrating most of its fury on New Jersey, New York and Connecticut and becoming one of the most expensive storms in history. Six months later, the region is still recovering and the scope of the storm has come into sharper focus. Figures are as of April 26.
DEATHS: The National Hurricane Center attributes 72 deaths in the United States directly to Sandy and 87 more indirectly, from causes such as hypothermia due to power outages, carbon monoxide poisoning and accidents during cleanup efforts, for a total of 159.
DAMAGE: The Hurricane Center estimated Sandy’s damage at $50 billion, second only to the $108 billion caused by Hurricane Katrina in Gulf Coast states in 2005. Congress approved more than $60 billion in storm aid for Sandy victims and their communities.
HOUSING AID: The Federal Emergency Management Agency has paid out $959 million for housing assistance and $848 million to communities and nonprofit groups in New York state, and $387.4 million in housing grants and $263 million to communities and nonprofit groups in New Jersey.
DISASTER LOANS: The Small Business Administration has made $1.4 billion in disaster loans for homeowners, renters and businesses in New York, and $731 million in New Jersey.
FLOOD INSURANCE: The National Flood Insurance Program has paid $3.4 billion in claims in New York, and another $3.3 billion in New Jersey.
UTILITIES: Jersey Central Power & Light says 1.3 million customers lost power in New Jersey. It cut 65,000 trees to help restore power, fixed 34,000 downed wires and put up 6,700 new utility poles. In New York, Consolidated Edison has strung 60 miles of new electrical cable after the storm and eventually restored power to more than 1 million customers.
Sources: National Hurricane Center, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Jersey Central Power & Light, Con Ed

Southern section of Seaside Heights boardwalk set to open this week

boardwalk.jpgThe southern section of the Seaside Heights boardwalk could reopen as early as Wednesday.Lisa Rose/The Star-Ledger
For the past six months, the goal in Seaside Heights was to rebuild the town’s boardwalk by Memorial Day.
Contractors are working ahead of schedule, however, and a section of wooden walkway could be open by the end of this week, said Mike Loundy, director of community improvements.
“It’s our hope to have the southern section of the boardwalk open by Friday or Saturday,” Loundy said today. “We’re anxious to reopen. Our vendors are anxious. Our customers are anxious. Nothing is written in stone, but we’re optimistic that we can have a three- to five-block section open to the public.”
Temporary railings are being installed so tourists can stroll on the boardwalk from Webster Avenue south to Seaside Park, but
there won’t be beach access before Memorial Day. Loundy said he is confident the northern section of the boardwalk will be completed by the holiday deadline.
Picture 31.jpgIn January, work had yet to begin on the Seaside Heights boardwalk.Lisa Rose/The Star-Ledger
“Over the last week and over the next week, we’re going to receive somewhere in the neighborhood of 20,000 pieces of lumber,” said Loundy, who also runs Seaside Realty. “It’s coming from all over the country. We expect to pick up speed with the lumber deliveries. The northern part of the boardwalk is 20 feet narrower than the southern end, so that will go faster. All the piles are in. The heavy lifting is done.”
Meanwhile, the submerged Jet Star roller coaster is on track to be removed from the water before Memorial Day.
“We’re optimistic within the next two weeks, possibly sooner, it will begin to be taken out,” Loundy said.
Loundy said he doesn’t know where the carnival ride, or pieces of it, will wind up. The coaster is owned by the Casino Pier amusement park, not the borough.
“It’s a pretty hot commodity,” said Loundy. “It wouldn’t surprise me if it turns into souvenirs of some form.”
Danny Merk, owner of the Shore Store shown on MTV’s “Jersey Shore,” said he’ll be sad to see the Jet Star go. His shop’s in the northern section of the boardwalk near the coaster.
“I’d like to see it stay in the water,” Merk said. “For the north end, it’s a little bit slower on the boardwalk and the Jet Star is an attraction. People love to take pictures of it. People have a lot of memories about it, and I’d like to keep it this summer. We lost a lot of roller coasters, a lot of rides. Every day, people ask me, ‘How can I get a picture of that?’ ”
The Jet Star is being salvaged by Weeks Marine, a Cranford-based contractor that operates the area’s largest floating crane. The company’s giant crane lifted the “Miracle on the Hudson” plane out of the water in 2009. The same piece of equipment was used to lower the space shuttle Enterprise onto the flight deck of the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum last spring.
Source of this article can be found here: NJ.com

Unfinished FEMA Flood Maps Put Sandy Victims In Limbo

by TRACEY SAMUELSON
A home damaged by Superstorm Sandy in Union Beach, N.J., sits on a raised platform to protect it from future flooding.
Mel Evans/AP
Superstorm Sandy pummeled the East Coast six months ago, and, as with other natural disasters, the Federal Emergency Management Agency was there from day one, finding people temporary shelter and later supporting rebuilding efforts.
FEMA also has a lesser-known role. It oversees the creation of flood maps, which model the risk of flooding in different areas during storms. These maps are also used to set building codes and flood insurance rates. In New York and New Jersey, FEMA is updating those maps, and so far many homeowners don’t like what they are seeing.
‘Flying By The Seat Of Their Pants’
Sitting in a makeshift office in his garage, George Kasimos is “FEMA-ing.” That’s what he calls the research and organizing he does with a group he started called Stop FEMA Now.
“FEMA is flying by the seat of their pants,” Kasimos says, “and we have to rebuild our homes with their seat-of-their-pants rules and regulations.”
The first floor of his house in Toms River, N.J., flooded during the storm and he had to gut it. He says the construction could have been done in January, but he stopped work for a few months when FEMA released a new version of its flood maps, which are used to set insurance rates.
“I thought I was on that show Punk’d, to be honest. I just didn’t believe it,” he says.
Kasimos figured if he doesn’t raise his home by 4 feet, his flood insurance would go from $1,000 per year to $15,000 per year. Because on these new maps, Kasimos is now in what’s called a Velocity Zone, or V Zone. This means that in a “hundred-year storm,” FEMA modeling predicts waves three feet or higher would hit his home.
Kasimos is supposed to elevate and put his house on pilings, which means lifting it off its foundation, moving it out of the way, and plunging big telephone poles into the ground for his house to sit atop. But Kasimos lives on a lagoon, not the open ocean. So he thinks he should be in an A Zone, at risk for flooding, but not wave damage. In an A Zone, he’d still elevate, but he could skip the costly pilings.
“In an A Zone, it cost about $50,000 for an average home … for a V Zone, it’s about $150,000,” he says.
Kasimos took his plight to Facebook, and now has more than 3,500 likes for his group; they’ve started meeting near-weekly.
Literally A Work In Progress
“We do anticipate the V Zone in certain areas becoming smaller, it is an advisory product,” FEMA’s Bill McDonnell says.
McDonnell says he agrees the maps are a work in progress. When Sandy hit, FEMA was already two years into a project to update the flood maps, which in some areas dated back to the 1980s. It generally takes 3-5 years to finish, but FEMA decided to release an early version, like a rough draft, so that people could have the most recent data available to decide how to rebuild.
“[It was] just out there for informational purposes, and then the state of New Jersey adopted it as a land use policy,” he says, “so that if people were going to rebuild, they have to rebuild to that standard.”
So the “advisory” maps basically became building code for repairing properties that have substantial storm damage. The state didn’t want people to rebuild based on old data and have to lift their houses higher later.
FEMA says the maps will change, but the number of people affected and the requirements for rebuilding will only decrease when the maps are finalized. That leaves Jersey Shore homeowners, like Kasimos, to decide whether to do work on their homes now that they may find out later wasn’t actually needed.
Kasimos has decided to rebuild without elevating for now. He’s trying to fix only what he has to in order to get back to normal. Even then, he’s still doing work he’ll have to tear up when he eventually elevates.
“[I'm] going to have to take apart the deck, my stairs, the siding, things like that, absolutely,” he says.
FEMA says it understands the urgency and is moving as fast as it can. It expects to start releasing a new version of the maps county by county, perhaps as early as June.
Source of this article can be found here: NPR.com

Thursday, April 25, 2013

The Jersey Shore Is Open for Business


Gov. Christie: Jersey Shore Is Open for Business

The New Jersey governor held a table discussion with area business owners about the prospects of the upcoming summer season.
Gov. Chris Christie isn’t just confident that the Jersey Shore is ready to welcome back visitors to its beaches and businesses, he’s sure of it.
At McLoone’s Pier House in Long Branch Thursday afternoon, Christie held a roundtable discussion with several area business owners to listen to their concerns and expectations for the summer, and to ask them to let him know what the state can do to facilitate the coast’s continued recovery following Hurricane Sandy.
Despite some lingering issues, the message was largely uniform.
“The good news I heard from them is that they’re open for business.”
Christie was speaking in the hard-hit central New Jersey coastline. Farther south in Ocean City, business leaders and city officials were ready toannounce even in December 2012 that “Ocean City is open for business.” Beaches, businesses and the Ocean City Boardwalk are ready for another banner season.
The goal now, Christie said, is to spread that message, to let the shore’s visitors know that their favorite summer destination is ready to welcome them for another successful beach season. Things won’t be the same, not this year at least, and some towns are further removed from recovery than others, but visitors shouldn’t let that be a deterrent when it comes to making their vacation plans. 
An ad campaign that will be featured online, on television and in print will emphasize the shore’s recovery. The state announced in February its intention to spend more than $25 million on a post-Sandy tourism campaign. The advertising effort, funded through the $50.7 billion Sandy relief package passed by Congress in January, will come out before Memorial Day and will target major metropolitan areas along the East Coast, Christie said.
He even volunteered to make an appearance in an ad or two if it would help, but said he would let someone else make that determination.
During a press conference that followed his business discussion, Christie provided an update about the Community Development Block Grant program, which will not only help residents rebuild and elevate their homes, but will provide business owners with funding to bridge their recovery efforts.
In all, $500 million of the first round $1.8 billion in CDBG money is dedicated to the state’s business owners.
Businesses should be able to apply for grant funding by May 1, Christie said, pending approval of the state’s funding plan by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, which oversees the block grant program.
As soon as that approval comes in, Christie said the state will move towards accepting grant applications.
“The fact is, as we get closer to (Memorial Day), things are going well,” he said. “We need to continue that momentum.”
The version of the Jersey Shore visitors return to is still somewhat unknown. Towns like Long Branch show little remnants of the damaged caused by Sandy, at least along the beach front properties. Take a trip down Route 35 and that’s hardly the case. Seaside Heights, along with other shore towns, are rebuilding their boardwalks and business, but still, other towns like Mantoloking in Ocean County and Sea Bright in Monmouth County are far removed from recovery.
A lot of that has to do with Sandy’s direct impact, but Christie isn’t putting all of the blame on the late October superstorm. According to the governor, some of the credit for delayed recovery falls on the lap of the U.S. House of Representatives, who pushed off approving a Sandy relief bill until mid-January.
Following Sandy, Christie said every day Congress delayed in approving a bill would add a day of recovery to the back end. We’re seeing that now, he said, as towns rush to recover, some of them still overwhelmed by widespread damage caused by the storm.
Despite the deadline pressure, Christie said the tourism season needn’t be put off.
“There will be places that have a difficult time being ready by Memorial Day,” he said. “But they will be a stark minority.”
The source of this article can be found here: Ocean City Patch
In other related news:

Christie assures shore business leaders help is on the way

Chris Christie visits Long Branch April 2013.JPG
Chris Christies held a roundtable with local officials and business leaders in Long Branch Thursday. The governor reassured local businesses that the state would help them prepare for the first tourist season after Hurricane Sandy. (Christopher Robbins / NJ.com)
LONG BRANCH - Governor Chris Christie reassured local business leaders reeling from the effects of Hurricane Sandy and nervous about the upcoming tourist season that help is on the way.
That help will come in the form of an advertising campaign of radio, television and internet spots to ensure tourists that shore businesses are open for business.
“An advertising program has already been approved and is being created right now,” Christie said. “It will be rolled out prior to Memorial Day.”
The campaign would be in addition to a local effort posting signs on high-traffic street corners. 
Christie also said he hoped federal dollars for a grant program to give businesses capital to resume work will be approved sometime next week, allowing the state to accept applications beginning May 1.
It will take more time, however, to repair and restore homes and buildings damaged by the storm – Christie discussed a program through the state Department of Community Affairs that will offer homeowners up to $150,000 in recovery funds on top of what they receive from FEMA and their flood insurance.
Christie promised money administered by the state would come with few strings attached.
“The only thing we’re going to do is mandate that the dune systems get rebuilt up-and-down the Jersey Shore from Sandy Hook to Cape May,” he said, adding that the work would proceed regardless of whether property owners agree.
“I have legal tools at my disposal, and I will use all of them.”
Christie also promised to be more visible along the Jersey Shore this summer.
“They’re going to see more of me at the Jersey Shore than they ever wanted to,” he said. “I’m looking forward to being in Long Branch over Memorial Day weekend.”
Christie was in Monmouth County Thursday afternoon hosting a business roundtable at Long Branch’s Pier Village.
“I wanted to take a trip here to Long Branch as we get within a month or so of the summer season to check in with business owners, find out how they were doing… and also to tell them about the programs that are getting ready to come.”
The source of this article can be found here: NJ.com