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  • 11
    May
    2013
    9:38am, EDT

    White House briefly evacuated due to smoking transformer

    According to the Secret Service, the West Wing of the White House was evacuated after smoke was seen in a mechanical room. NBC's Peter Alexander reports.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Reporters were evacuated from the White House on Saturday morning after an overheated transformer drew fire trucks to the West Wing.

    The evacuation came after smoke was seen in a mechanical room, the Secret Service said. Multiple fire trucks raced to the building at about 7:15 a.m. Secret Service officers blocked off the entrances to the West Wing.

    “The transformer problem was quickly resolved. Electricity and personnel access to the West Wing has returned to normal,” a White House official said in a statement to Reuters. “The First Family was unaffected.”

    No injuries were reported.

    Carolyn Kaster / AP

    District of Columbia Fire department trucks and personnel respond to a call at the White House, Saturday, May 11, 2013, in Washington.

    268 comments

    Trying to shred too many Benghazi documents at once?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: white-house, fire, west-wing, barack-obama
  • 6
    May
    2013
    11:12am, EDT

    'Pull over, pull over!': Driver describes horrific Bay Area limousine fire

    A limousine in Califfornia carrying nine women to a bridal shower suddenly caught fire on Saturday while driving on a bridge over the San Francisco Bay, killing five of the women including the bride-to-be. NBC's Tamron Hall reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Andrew Rafferty, and Daniel Arkin, NBC News

    Five women who were killed Saturday evening after the stretch limousine they were riding to a bridal party burst into flames on a bridge over the San Francisco Bay tried to escape the inferno through the vehicle’s narrow partition, according to the driver.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Orville Brown, 46, sounded shaken as he described the horrific episode to NBCBayArea.com. According to the station, Brown said he heard commotion in the rear of the vehicle and thought one of the nine female passengers was asking him to pull over on the shoulder of the San Mateo-Hayward Bridge so she could smoke a cigarette.

    But Brown quickly realized that the woman was crying out for help as a fast-moving blaze and thick plumes of smoke engulfed the back half of the limousine, he told the station.

    Read more at NBCBayArea.com

    “She said, ‘Smoke, smoke, smoke, smoke! Pull over, pull over, pull over, pull over!”

    The women frantically tried to squeeze through the narrow partition behind the driver’s seat, according to Brown.

    “We were all in shock,” Brown said. “Scared, crying, frustrated."

    Brown told the station that he managed to wrench three of the women through the divider, although the San Mateo County Coroner's Office said only one woman made it through the partition.

    "My understanding is that three passengers got out the side back door on the driver's side and one made it out the passenger compartment window successfully to the driver's compartment," San Mateo Coroner Robert Foucrault told NBCBayArea.com.

    Foucrault said the harrowing episode is one of the most tragic he has encountered.

    "It's one of the worst fatalities that I've witnessed in the years I've been at this office," Foucrault told the station. "It's just the sheer realization that these people were trying to escape from inside the vehicle."

    The five women who died in the blaze were discovered huddled near the front of the passengers' area, suggesting they had tried to escape through the partition, Foucrault said. They were “probably killed by the fire,” but the cause of death was not immediately confirmed, according to California Highway Patrol Officer Art Montiel.

    Among those who perished was Neriza Fojas, 31, for whom the bridal shower was being thrown, according to NBCBayArea.com. Fojas was recently married in the United States but was planning to travel to her native Philippines to hold a ceremony in front of family next month. Eight of the women in the car were internationally sponsored nurses working in Oakland. 

    The four survivors sustained injuries including burns or smoke inhalation, Montiel said Sunday.

    Authorities said the limo picked the women up in Oakland and was heading to the Crown Plaza Hotel when the vehicle erupted in flames.

    VIEWER PHOTO: Limo fire kills passengers on San Mateo Bridge.Story @ NBCBayArea,com twitter.com/nbcbayarea/sta�

    — NBC Bay Area (@nbcbayarea) May 5, 2013

    The CHP said the fire was first reported around 10 p.m. local time (1 a.m. ET) in the third lane of westbound state Highway 92.

    The westbound lanes of the bridge, which connects San Mateo and Alameda counties, about 20 miles southeast of San Francisco, were closed for several hours Saturday night.

    The California Highway Patrol announced Monday that the limousine was authorized to carry just "eight passengers or less" -- not nine. Investigators added that Brown was properly licensed to operate the vehicle. 

    Brown told NBCBayArea.com that he thought "a limo could hold more than that, to be honest with you," and added, "I don't make the rules I'm just a driver."

    Capt. Mike Maskarich told reporters that investigators are working to ascertain if any criminal wrongdoing occurred.

    Investigators do not believe the fire resulted from a collision and will be looking into previous inspections to see if the limo had any prior issues.

    LimoStop, Inc., the owner of the limo, said in a statement: "We are deeply saddened by the tragedy last night involving the young women, five of whom lost their lives in the limousine fire on the San Mateo Bridge."

    357 comments

    What a horrifying way to perish.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: california, fire, limo
  • Updated
    6
    May
    2013
    2:23pm, EDT

    Crews winning battles against California wildfires

    Weather conditions, once working against firefighters, are now helping ground crews contain 60 percent of the blaze in southern California, NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    California firefighters expected to contain a massive wildfire Monday that had burned 28,000 acres, damaged and destroyed properties, caused evacuations and cost millions of dollars to battle, authorities said.

    A reversal of winds and higher humidity helped the more than 1,000 fire personnel on the scene reach a 75 percent containment level late Sunday, and evacuation orders had been lifted, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, commonly known as Cal Fire.

    The blaze, which started Wednesday, quickly spread as hot Santa Ana winds and low humidity pushed it toward the Pacific Ocean. By Friday it had grown to 10,000 acres and was threatening Malibu after reaching the beach in Ventura County.

    An eight-mile stretch of the Pacific Coast Highway was closed, and evacuation orders were widespread. But over the weekend, the wind changed direction, blowing cooler and much more humid air in from the Pacific.

    Water-dropping airplanes and helicopters have fought the Springs Fire for days, along with more than 2,000 firefighters, NBCLosAngeles.com reported, saying the cost of the effort was expected to reach about $8 million.

    Authorities on Monday continued battling a second large blaze, the Panther Fire in Tehama County, which had burned nearly 7,000 acres by Sunday night and was concentrated in rugged terrain, Cal Fire said.

    More than 1,800 people were working Sunday night to gain the upper hand on the fire, and three injuries had been reported. The fire was listed as 60 percent contained, and Cal Fire said the blaze was expected to be fully surrounded by Thursday.

    Slideshow: California wildfires

    David Mcnew / Getty Images

    Firefighters battle a growing wildfire that reached the beaches in Ventura County and pushes its way toward the upscale city of Malibu.

    Launch slideshow

    The Panther fire threatened a couple of commercial properties and outbuildings, but it had not destroyed homes, Cal Fire said.

    The much larger Springs Fire threatened thousands of homes, but damage was limited to 16 outbuildings and four commercial properties, Cal Fire said, noting that 10 outbuildings had been destroyed.

    Weather was expected to continue aiding the firefighters, according to the National Weather Service. The “Red Flag Warnings” that indicate conditions most favorable for wildfires had been lifted for all but the northernmost part of the state by Monday.

    The cause of both fires remained under investigation Monday.

    Ventura County Fire Department spokesman Bill Nash said last week that there had been no lightning or other natural phenomenon when the Springs Fire started.

    In nearby Riverside County, the so-called Summit Fire was fully contained Saturday night after burning more than 3,000 acres, destroying a home and causing two injuries. The cause of it, too, remained under investigation.

    Related:

    'Incendiary summer': Early fires bode ill for California

     

    This story was originally published on Mon May 6, 2013 6:00 AM EDT

    11 comments

    People in California should be charged a carbon tax for all these fires. They are polluting the rest of the country as they send their dangerous pollutants east on westerly winds.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, california, fire, summit, updated, springs, wildfire, panther, riverside-county, ventura-county
  • Updated
    6
    May
    2013
    8:31am, EDT

    5 women killed in limousine fire on Bay Area bridge

    A limousine in Calif. carrying nine women to a bridal shower suddenly caught fire on Saturday while driving on a bridge over the San Francisco Bay, killing five of the women including the bride-to-be. NBC's Tamron Hall reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson and Andrew Rafferty, NBC News

    Five women, including a new bride, were killed late Saturday when fire engulfed a stretch limousine carrying them to a party on the San Mateo-Hayward Bridge over the San Francisco Bay, police said.

    Four other occupants escaped with injuries including burns or smoke inhalation, California Highway Patrol Officer Art Montiel said. The driver escaped unharmed.

    Witnesses at the scene told NBCBayArea.com people were trapped inside the burning limo, which was a white Lincoln Town Car traveling from Alameda to Foster City.

    Montiel said the women, all in their 30s and 40s, were "probably killed by the fire,” but the cause of death was not immediately clear.

    Among those who perished was 31-year-old Neriza Fojas, for whom the bridal shower was being thrown, the San Fransico Chronicle reported. Fojas was recently married in the United States but was planning to travel to her native Philippines to hold a ceremony in front of family next month.

    Authorities say the limo picked the women up in Oakland and was heading to the Crowne Plaza Hotel when the vehicle burst into flames.

    VIEWER PHOTO: Limo fire kills passengers on San Mateo Bridge.Story @ NBCBayArea,com twitter.com/nbcbayarea/sta�

    — NBC Bay Area (@nbcbayarea) May 5, 2013

    The CHP said the fire was first reported around 10 p.m. local time (1 a.m. ET) in the third lane of westbound state Highway 92.

    The westbound lanes of the bridge, which connects San Mateo and Alameda counties, about 20 miles southeast of San Francisco, were closed for several hours Saturday night.

    Investigators do not believe the fire was a result of a collision and will be looking into previous inspections to see if the limo had any prior issues.

    Witnesses told NBCBayArea.com the limo was not involved in an accident prior to catching on fire. A viewer, David Solomon, sent in a picture that he said of was of the blazing vehicle.

    When asked whether an "explosion" happened, Montiel said he couldn't confirm that.  He did say the "vehicle was partially engulfed."

    Limo Stop, the owner of the limo, said in a statement: "We are deeply saddened by the tragedy last night involving the young women, five of whom lost their lives in the limousine fire on the San Mateo Bridge."

    NBC News' Justin Kirschner contributed to this report.

    This story was originally published on Sun May 5, 2013 3:30 AM EDT

    648 comments

    Some of comments just shows you how sick our society is.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, california, fire, prom, updated, limo, limousine, san-mateo, us-news-bay-area
  • 4
    May
    2013
    12:19pm, EDT

    'Long, hot, incendiary summer': Early wildfires bode ill for California

    As Ayman Mohyeldin reports from Point Mugu, Calif., firefighters are hoping to take advantage of rain in the forecast to help contain a wildfire that has scorched at least 28,000 acres in Ventura County.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Record-setting temperatures, erratic winds and a parched landscape spell a dangerous fire season for California, experts said on Friday as firefighters fought to control several large blazes of a kind that usually would not raise thick plumes of smoke over the horizon until late fall.

    “This is definitely a preview of a long, hot, incendiary summer,” said William Patzert, a climatologist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada-Flintridge.

    A combination of early, powerful gusts from the inland to the coast, called Santa Ana winds, breathed life into the roaring orange flames that devoured brush and raced down hillsides near Malibu toward the Pacific Ocean on Thursday night. The sea-bound winds pour into the southern part of the state from the northeast and southwest, becoming drier and hotter as they approach the coast, said Stuart Seto, a weather specialist at the National Weather Service in Oxnard, Calif.

    This week, “all the ingredients” came together across parts of California, Patzert said.

    The Spring Fire in Ventura County was 56 percent contained, Cal Fire said on its Twitter feed Saturday evening, after jumping to 28,000 acres on Friday, shutting down a portion of the Pacific Coast Highway for a time and drawing nearly 1,900 fire personnel, eight helicopters, and a half-dozen air tankers. The fire damaged at least 15 residences and dozens of other structures, NBCLosAngeles reported, citing fire officials.

    The Summit Fire in Riverside County was fully contained at about 3,166 acres, Cal Fire said. Riverside County fire officials said two firefighters were injured as they worked to draw a line around the flames, which destroyed one home, NBCLosAngeles.com reported.

    More than 1,000 firefighters battled a third blaze, the 6,720-acre Panther Fire, in Tehama County.

    “At this point it’s just a question of meteorology, of the Santa Anas, and of course in Southern California 95 percent of the fires are human (caused),” Patzert said. “Fire is fuel plus meteorology plus ignition.”

    Many California residents in areas prone to wildfires have known the fear of watching flames lick the borders of their property, but in the past wide-scale destructive fires usually have not struck until summer or fall. A series of 22 major fires across seven Southern California counties destroyed more than 2,200 homes in 2007 – but those fires lasted over three weeks from October to November, according to a report by the Orange County Fire Authority.

    The 2009 Station Fire burned over 160,000 acres, destroyed 80 structures, and killed two county firefighters. That fire, the largest in Los Angeles County history, wasn't sparked until late August, according to an after action review. The cost to fully contain the Station Fire topped $95 million, the U.S. Fire Service reported.

    “This is certainly one of the earliest fire seasons I remember,” Patzert said.

    Jonathan Alcorn / Reuters

    Firefighters battle the Springs Fire at Point Mugu State Park on May 3. A wind-driven wildfire raged along the California coast north of Los Angeles early on Friday.

    Firefighters around Camarillo contended with unpredictable Santa Ana winds as flames threatened residences on Thursday and Friday. Such winds drive from inland to the sea, but they usually occur during the fall and winter months.

    “We’re having Santa Ana events in May,” Capt. Mike Lindberry of the Ventura County Fire Department said on Thursday. “An event like this … it hasn’t happened in my career.”

    Those winds make it harder for firefighters to corral the flames as they leap across scrubby, uninhabited areas.

    “The winds are just super strong. They couldn’t get ahead of the fire because the winds are so strong, and the heat was tremendous,” said Seto.

    Extremely dry conditions for this time of year have also contributed to the growth of the fires, Seto said. The dryness of the vegetation that fueled the flames in the Camarillo area was comparable to what is usually measured in July, he said.

    Temperatures hit a record high for the date of 98 degrees in Camarillo on Thursday, Seto said, topping the previous high of 94 degrees in 2004. Normal for this time of May is about 74 degrees, he said.

    While parts of the Plains states and upper Midwest saw late-season snowfall earlier this week, officials in California have said that the state's snowpack is lighter than normal. That means the amount of water that flows into state reservoirs over coming months will be less than usual as the snow melts.

    “I’m finding nothing,” Frank Gehrke, chief surveyor for the Department of Water Resources, told The Associated Press on Thursday. “Seriously, there is no snow on the course at all.” The water content in California’s high-altitude snow turned out to be only 17 percent of what it usually is, the department reported.

    Fire officials have been warning about the dangerous fire conditions in California for several months. After an 100-acre brush fire flared up in Monrovia in April, city fire Chief Chris Donovan told reporters that experts anticipated a “very dry – and very bad” season.

    A wildfire outlook produced by the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho, predicted “above normal” fire potential for Southern California, the Sacramento Valley and parts of southern Oregon in May. The likelihood of significant fires will expand through Washington, Arizona, New Mexico and other large swaths of California over the summer months, according to the fire center’s outlook.

    “This big picture is across the country it’s been sort of two winters, as the Northeast and the Midwest had a never-ending winter with spring that just didn’t want to show up,” Patzert said. Meanwhile, in Southern California, “the rain spigot essentially just turned off in January.”

    “It’s a no-brainer to tell you that it is going to be a busy fire season,” he said.

    Slideshow: California wildfires

    Jonathan Alcorn / Reuters

    A fire engine is parked on Pacific Coast Highway as the Springs Fire burns in the hills at Point Mugu State Park on May 3.

    Launch slideshow

    Related:

    • 'Monster' California wildfire reaches ocean, pushes toward Malibu
    • 12-square-mile Springs Fire spreads toward Ventura County Coast
    • Thousands in Calif. wildfire's path evacuated

    117 comments

    Prayers to those who have suffered. Immediate relief is coming.. Mother Nature will give us rain. Rain Rain Please come, little johnny wants to play in the rain.

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    Explore related topics: fire, california, wildfire, los-angeles, malibu, springs-fire, summit-fire
  • Updated
    3
    May
    2013
    4:49pm, EDT

    'Monster' California wildfire reaches ocean, pushes toward Malibu

    Slideshow: California wildfires

    Jonathan Alcorn / Reuters

    A fire engine is parked on Pacific Coast Highway as the Springs Fire burns in the hills at Point Mugu State Park on May 3.

    Launch slideshow

    By John Newland and Matthew DeLuca, NBC News

    Southern California firefighters battled back a series of sprawling, brush-fueled wildfires on Friday, including one that had blazed a trail to the beach in Ventura County overnight and was pushing toward the upscale city of Malibu, officials said.

    At least six fires of various sizes flared up as high temperatures, low humidity and brittle brush left the state a veritable tinderbox over the last two days, although conditions were improving by the afternoon.

    The so-called Springs Fire, made worse by howling Santa Ana winds and unusually dry vegetation, crept within "seven or eight miles" of Malibu around 2 a.m. local time [5 a.m. ET], Ventura County Fire Department spokesman Bill Nash said.

    "We've got hot, dirty, unglamorous firefighting work going on right now, guys with shovels trying to scratch out lines on the ground," Nash said in the early hours of Friday. "We've got those guys on these steep hillsides in the dark with nothing but the light of the fire and a flashlight."

    Dry winds from inland to the ocean brought gusts of 40 to 50 miles per hour to the Southern California region on Friday. By 1 p.m Pacific time, the temperatures had dropped 11 degrees and the humidity shot up to 19 percent. Warnings remained in effect as winds stoked the flames, the National Weather Service reported.

    “We’re looking good,” Battalion Chief Fred Burris of the Ventura County Fire Department said on Friday, according to NBC Los Angeles. “We believe we’re past the major structure threat at this time.”

    The Springs Fire grew to 10,000 acres and was 10 percent contained as of early Friday morning, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Prevention.

    An eight-mile stretch of the Pacific Coast Highway was shut down for a time on Thursday night as bright orange flames raced down scrubby hillsides toward the Pacific Ocean.

    “We are asking members of the public to be very aware: This is very dangerous,” said Ventura County Fire Department spokesman Tom Kruschke. “This is still a moving fire. If you were asked to evacuate, it will be a while before you are allowed in. And if at one point you are uncomfortable, please leave the area. It’s not safe to stay.”

    The fires become especially dangerous when tree cover is dry and Santa Anna winds gust at high speeds, creating a wake-up call for everyone in California to be prepared. NBC's Mike Taibbi reports.

    “The firemen have been doing a really great job of keeping it away from the houses,” said Sara Mallam, a resident of Newbury Park, near Thousand Oaks, Calif. “It is kind of scary to see it get so close, but they really seem to know what they’re doing.”

    Though the more than 925 firefighters on the scene got a brief overnight reprieve as the humidity jumped and winds died down, winds picked up again after sunrise on Friday.

    Firefighters received help from tankers and helicopters in the air after the sun rose on Friday, according to a release from the Ventura County Fire Department.

    Complicating the situation is the extremely dry plant life left from a season in which only about five inches of rain fell, officials said.

    Friday "may be the hottest day of the week, and the humidity we do expect to plummet," Nash said. "We’re faced with a situation right now where the vegetation on the hillsides, the moisture level is what we typically see in August."

    The cause of the fire remained under investigation Friday. There had been no lightning or other natural fire-starting phenomenon in the area when the blaze began, Nash said.

    In Riverside County, hundreds of firefighters had begun to gain control of a wind-lashed 3,000-acre wildfire that consumed one home and led to the evacuation of hundreds of others.

    The Riverside County fire, dubbed the Summit Fire, remained at just under 3,000 acres Friday morning and was about 65 percent contained, according to a Cal Fire incident report. Firefighters worked to improve containment lines around the raging blaze that threatened homes on Wednesday, but one building had been destroyed.

    Two of the 650 firefighters trying to tame the blaze sustained non-life-threatening injuries, according to the report.

    Additionally, more than 1,000 firefighters were battling a third major wildfire, designated the Panther Fire, Friday in rugged timberland in Northern California’s Tehama County about 30 miles east of Chico.

    NBC News' Jeff Black contributed to this report.

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

     

    Related:

    • Thousands in Calif. wildfire's path evacuated
    • 'Monster' California wildfire reaches ocean, pushes toward Malibu
    • 12-square-mile Springs Fire spreads toward Ventura County coast

    This story was originally published on Thu May 2, 2013 9:46 AM EDT

    276 comments

    Get a grip people. There is no safe place on this earth and there never has been. We live and we die. Make the best of it while you can.

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    Explore related topics: fire, california, wildfire, southern-california, los-angeles, featured, ventura-county, malibu, updated, riverside-county, springs-fire, summit-fire, panther-fire
  • Updated
    29
    Apr
    2013
    3:31pm, EDT

    Panorama: Sandy-struck Breezy Point, then and now

    Soon after Superstorm Sandy pushed a surge of water through the Queens, N.Y., neighborhood of Breezy Point, a fire engulfed more than 100 homes. A panoramic image taken on Nov. 1, 2012 (bottom image), shows the wrecked remains of a town that was both swamped and burned. While the Army Corps of Engineers has largely cleared the debris, little rebuilding has begun in this area (top image). Use the navigation buttons to move left or right or to zoom.( David Friedman and John Makely / NBC News)

    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.

    Related links:

    • Six months after Sandy many residents are still adrift
    • Stars of Hope shine in Breezy Point
    • View other images of the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy from Breezy Point 
    • Sandy-struck Breezy Point facing 'greatest historical challenge'
    • Sandy victims on the move but temporary housing 'will never be...home'

     

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    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    This story was originally published on Mon Apr 29, 2013 5:11 AM EDT

    13 comments

    Way to get after it folks! Lookin' good. They were still sitting on their roof tops this long after Katrina.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us-news, weather, featured, new-york, fire, hurricane, updated, flood, fema, sandy, superstorm, panorama, breezy-point, rockaway
  • 29
    Apr
    2013
    3:53am, EDT

    Six months after Sandy: 'Home sweet home' for some, others still adrift

    John Makely / NBC News

    Six months after Superstorm Sandy slammed into the Jersey Shore, a heavily damaged home in Mantoloking 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.”

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    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 blasted ashore on Oct. 29 near Brigantine, N.J., leaving more than at least 147 people dead in its wake in the Caribbean and the U.S., according to the National Hurricane Center. 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.

                                         View an interactive panorama: Sandy-battered town, then and now

    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 Carrozza'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.

    John Makely / NBC News

    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 Carrozza, 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 Carrozza, 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.

    The Army Corps of Engineers removed the charred remnants earlier this year, leaving just sand across a broad swath of an area known as The Wedge.

    John Makely / NBC News

    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.”

    Miranda Leitsinger / NBC News

    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.”

    Related:

    Slideshow: Then and now in Breezy Point

    For subway station devastated by Sandy, road to recovery just beginning

    Six months after Sandy, Atlantic City is betting on a comeback

    363 comments

    Life is tough. Folks shouldn't always expect the government to bail them out. Suck it up.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new, hurricane, fema, flooding, fire, surge, jersey, york, featured, sandy, months, breezy-point, superstorm, hurricane-sandy
  • Updated
    19
    Apr
    2013
    8:36am, EDT

    'Our hearts are broken': Texas town grieves in wake of devastating blast

    Authorities in the small community of West, Texas, which was stunned by a massive explosion in a fertilizer plant on Wednesday, are searching for survivors and clues about what caused the blast, believed to be an accident.

    By M. Alex Johnson, John Newland and Tracy Connor, NBC News
    Searches resumed at a fertilizer plant early Friday after residents of the Texas town devastated by an explosion gathered to mourn their community's losses.

    A non-denominational service was held at St. Mary of the Assumption Catholic Church on Thursday night. The Rev. Ed Karasek said that the town "will never be the same, but we will persevere."

    He added: "Our hearts are hurting, our hearts are broken."

    Officials have said as many as 15 people may have died and more than 160 others were injured in the blast, which occurred just before 8 p.m. local time (9 p.m. ET) Wednesday in the farming town of West a few miles north of Waco.

    "The area around the site is just total devastation," Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott said at a news conference Thursday night. He said an apartment complex that was flattened "looks like it was a bombing site of an explosion the kind that you see in Baghdad."

    Police initially said between five and 15 people may have been killed, and Mayor Tommy Muska, a member of the town's Fire Department, told NBC News that he feared those numbers could double. But state officials said it was too soon to say how many had died.

    View more videos at: http://nbcdfw.com.

    Despite the lack of official confirmation, The Associated Press reported that the names of the dead were becoming known in the town of 2,800.

    "Word gets around quick in a small town," said local resident Brenda Covey, 46. 

    Earlier, Sgt. Jason Reyes of the Texas Department of Public Safety said he could confirm that "we do have fatalities," but he refused to give any numbers.

    "You've got to understand, we are still in a search-and-rescue mode right now," he said.

    Tommy Muska, a volunteer firefighter and the mayor of West, Texas, which was rocked by an explosion at a fertilizer plant on Wednesday, talks about the search for survivors and how the town will move forward.

    Matt Cawthon, chief deputy sheriff of McLennan County, said Thursday afternoon that the presence of dangerous chemicals at West Fertilizer Co., including ammonium nitrate, was significantly slowing the investigation.

    Agents from the state Commission on Environmental Quality and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency were combing the scene "to determine just how dangerous it is for our first responders," he said.

    The cause of the fire and explosion remained undetermined, but there was no indication of criminal activity, Waco police Sgt. William Patrick Swanton said. The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said it was sending the same National Response Team that worked this week's explosion at the Boston Marathon to lead the Texas investigation. 

    "We do not know the number of any fatalities. We do not know where the fire started. We do not know the cause," Assistant State Fire Marshal Kelly Kistner said.

    Dozens of homes wrecked
    The blast, which shook the ground with the force of a magnitude-2.1 earthquake, all but obliterated a five- to six-block radius around the plant, where two massive tanks held highly pressurized anhydrous ammonia. It wrecked about 50 to 75 homes and a middle school. A 50-unit apartment complex had its walls torn off and its roof peeled back.

    Slideshow: Fertilizer plant explosion in Texas

    Rod Aydelotte / AP

    The huge blast rocked a small Texas town Wednesday, April 16, killing at least five people and destroying nearby homes.

    Launch slideshow

    "It just sucked you in and just threw you to the ground," resident Crystal Jerigan told TODAY, describing how she grabbed her two daughters out of a car and dived through the front door of their house.

    "It was very difficult coming into work knowing my family may be coming into the hospital," Melissa James, a social worker at Hillcrest Baptist Medical Center in Waco, said Thursday. Her relatives suffered only minor injuries.

    The blast could be felt for miles.

    Sammy Chavez of West, who ran to the West Rest Haven nursing home despite being injured, told NBC 5 of Dallas that he found a surreal scene.

    "I just saw the explosion, and then after that I took off running, and then I saw the West home, and people you know were buried under the West home. The West home was gone," Chavez said. "It was gone. The school's gone. The apartments are gone. It's horrible."

    Mariah Garcia/photo via NBCDFW.com

    Smoke rises from the scene of a fertilizer plant explosion near Waco, Texas, on Wednesday, April 17..

    Derrick Hurtt was in his truck, recording the fire from about 300 yards, when the flames erupted with a blinding flash, followed by a towering pillar of smoke.

    He caught the explosion on his camera, along with the panicked screams of his daughter Khloey, who begged him to drive away.

    "I'm pretty sure it lifted the truck off the ground. It just blew me over on top of her," Hurtt said on TODAY. "It all happened so quick that things kind of went black for a moment."

    'It is devastated'
    West has only about 2,700 residents, but the affected area is a densely populated neighborhood, and "it is devastated," Cawthon said.

    But while the toll is "immense," said Abbott, the attorney general, "the other thing we clearly saw in touring around West is the clear sign of hope. You can see hope in the eyes of the rescue workers. ... You can see already the beginnings of the community working to piece itself back together."

    State officials said the plant had been at the site since 1962. Its state authorization lapsed at some point, but after a 2006 complaint about a smell of ammonia in the air, it came back into compliance, and there have been no more issues.

    Satellite view showing the location of West Fertilizer Co. in West, Texas.

    Police said that soon after the blast there was one possible report of a looting incident but that it was "not rampant," and no one was being allowed into the search area.

    There were also reports of price gouging, said Abbott, who promised that profiteers "will be facing a lawsuit by the Texas attorney general."

    In a statement, President Barack Obama thanked first responders, pledged support and offered prayers.

    "A tight-knit community has been shaken, and good, hard-working people have lost their lives," Obama said.

    Michelle Acevedo, Gabe Gutierrez, Edgar Zuniga Jr. and Matthew DeLuca of NBC News and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Related:

    Texas fertilizer plant also stored explosive chemical used in Oklahoma City bomb

    Mayor of Texas town rocked by explosion: 'We're going to fight back'

    'The whole street is gone': Bloodied eyewitnesses describe Texas explosion horror

    West Fertilizer had few violations, was pillar of community

    Texas fertilizer tragedy: How to help

    This story was originally published on Thu Apr 18, 2013 8:56 PM EDT

    2224 comments

    Hope all are well!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us-news, featured, texas, fire, explosion, breaking-news, updated, fertilizer, waco
  • Updated
    18
    Apr
    2013
    9:17am, EDT

    Dramatic amateur images of Texas fertilizer explosion

    At least five to 15 people were killed and more than 160 wounded when a large fertilizer plant exploded, rocking the small Texas town of West late Wednesday. The blast destroyed dozens of homes and businesses, police said. See some of the dramatic amateur video and photos that have poured in via social media. Check back for more on this developing story. 

    This story was originally published on Thu Apr 18, 2013 9:00 AM EDT

    2 comments

    left out the best photo shown on national news photo made from a distance. cloud umbrella looked like nuclear

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, texas, fire, explosion, updated, fertilizer, waco
  • 14
    Apr
    2013
    12:34am, EDT

    'Worst tragedy we've ever had': Fire kills five in small Idaho town

    SALMON, Idaho - A fire sparked by an electrical short swept through a house in Idaho on Saturday, killing a family of four and a teenage friend who had been spending the night as part of a birthday celebration, a fire official said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Orofino Fire Chief Mike Lee said flames had fully engulfed the home and likely caused the smoke inhalation deaths of the five occupants by the time firefighters arrived at a blaze reported by a neighbor at 1:38 a.m. local time. The home did not have smoke alarms.

    The fire in the small logging community in north-central Idaho killed a couple and their two teenage children as well as the teenage friend, Lee said.


    There was no sign of foul play, he said. Autopsies were planned early next week for the dead, whose names were withheld pending notification of family.

    "It is the worst tragedy we've ever had in Orofino, fire-wise," Lee said. He added that two veteran Idaho state fire marshals reported they had never investigated a house fire that took as many lives.

    The fire was ignited by a short in an overloaded extension cord on the front porch of a two-story home in a residential neighborhood, Lee said. He said the family was likely asleep when the fire swept through the rooms on the ground floor of the home. 

    -- Reuters

    67 comments

    Very sad for this family and town. I've visited here and found the scenery beautiful and the people quite kind.

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    Explore related topics: fire, idaho
  • 13
    Apr
    2013
    5:54pm, EDT

    Three-alarm Bronx fire leaves 37 injured, 5 critical

    By Katherine Creag, NBCNewYork.com

    A three-alarm fire in New York City's the Bronx Saturday morning left 37 people injured, including one child and four adults who were in critical condition, fire department officials said.

    The fire broke out in an apartment on the fifth floor of a building on East 149th Street in Melrose at around 7:45 a.m. Authorities said smoke from the fire quickly spread throughout the 27-story high-rise.

    "When we opened the door to put the fire out, it just fills the building up -- the hallways, the stairs -- up with smoke," said FDNY Deputy Assistant Chief Jack Mooney.



    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Residents said the heavy smoke darkened their hallways and made breathing extremely difficult. At least 12 people had to be carried down by firefighters, authorities said.

    "Smoke was so thick on 22 and the fire started on five," said building resident, Dolores Carter, an asthma sufferer who had to be helped down by firefighters and needed to use a ventilator afterward. "It was a trying time."

    Officials said most of the injuries were minor, but four adults and a child were being treated for smoke inhalation in hyperbaric chambers at Jacobi Medical Center.

    Red Cross workers were on the scene assisting evacuated residents.

    There is no word yet on what caused the fire.

    30 comments

    Someone's meth lab got out of control.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, new-york, fire, bronx, nbcnewyork
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