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  • Recommended: Rebirth after the big storm: How one small town dug out, spruced up and lived on
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  • 8
    Nov
    2012
    7:09pm, EST

    After Hurricane Sandy kills parents, Rutgers student must raise 3 siblings

    A screen shot of Wishuponahero.com shows the appeal by Zoe Everett, a Rutgers student who lost her parents to Hurricane Sandy and now must raise her three younger siblings.

    By Jim Gold, NBC News

    A 19-year-old Rutgers University student has decided to put college on hold to care for her three younger siblings after their parents were killed by a falling tree during Hurricane Sandy.

    Richard Everett, 54, and his wife, Elizabeth, 46, of Randolph, N.J., were driving through Mendham Township during the storm when a tree crushed their truck, the Newark Star-Ledger reported.

    Their two sons, Theo, 14, and Pierce, 11, were riding in the back but not seriously harmed, the newspaper said. Their two daughters, Zoe, 19, and Talia, 17, were not with them.

    "Before Hurricane Sandy I was a typical 19-year-old student at Rutgers," Zoe Everett posted on Wishuponahero.com. She told about the 100-mph wind that knocked down the tree onto the pickup’s cab and the call she received while she was studying for an exam.


    "At 11 p.m. on Oct. 29, I found out both of my parents had been killed," Everett wrote. "A moment in time, a second of bad luck, changed my life and my siblings' lives forever."

    "I now have two goals: caring for and being guardian of my three younger siblings and keeping my family in the house we grew up in."

    After Everett posted her story on Wishuponahero.com, more than $56,000 in donations poured in. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The family’s finances are frozen while lawyers sort out the estate, said Dave Girgenti, the site's founder. "The donations will tide them over."

    The fundraising goal for the Everett family was only $5,000. "The entire country came together to help this girl with her tragedy. Her wish is granted," Girgenti said.

    Overwhelmed by the public's generosity, Everett wrote a follow-up post thanking people for their donations and directing them to give to others.

    "Wish Upon a Hero has raised funds for my family that have exceeded our wildest dreams," Everett wrote Thursday in response to the fundraising. "The donations have ensured our well-being for the next few months and will hold us over until we are able to access our own funds."

    "My family has been so blessed, and we would like to be able to do the same for others who have suffered the misfortune of Hurricane Sandy," she wrote.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • Giffords, Kelly confront Tucson shooter in court
    • Record snow, new power outages as storm slams Northeast
    • Hail to the chief: Americans eyed in search for Britain's top rabbi
    • Gov. Andrew Cuomo fires New York's emergency management chief, official says
    • Man admits Election Day burglary of Nancy Pelosi house, cops say

    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    197 comments

    Must be tough being you Billy -- bad things happen even if you are an "affluent white person", it's how you handle the challenge is what defines you......something you seem to know little about. Seems this young lady is a lot more grown up and responsible than you.

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    Explore related topics: weather, new-york, flooding, storm, snow, new-jersey, northeast, featured, sandy
  • 8
    Nov
    2012
    6:10am, EST

    In wake of nor'easter, 'patience is the name of the game'

    Those who lost their homes during Hurricane Sandy are salvaging what they can from the wreckage, and trying to stay afloat financially as they cope with the aftermath of the storm. NBC's Ann Curry reports.

    By Miranda Leitsinger and Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    Updated at 11:24 p.m. ET: BREEZY POINT, N.Y. -- After waking up to several inches of snow and more than 200,000 new power outages, residents in areas battered by Superstorm Sandy on Thursday got back to the long-term work of rebuilding. 

    Miranda Leitsinger

    Snow dusted debris outside homes Thursday in Breezy Point, a community in the Rockaways section of New York City.

    "Patience is the name of the game here," said Joseph Murray in Breezy Point, where snow from the nor’easter dusted the New York City community destroyed last week by flooding and a fire. 

    Families here on Thursday continued efforts to save their waterlogged homes from mold, with some piling items on the layer of snow in 40-degree weather. 


    New York City and Long Island will begin rationing gas to relieve frustration and long lines at the pump, NBCNewYork.com reported. The rationing does not apply to emergency vehicles, taxis or individual gas cans.

    Murray, 27, was at his family’s home after sanitation workers cleared out their pile of garbage, leaving three salvageable nightstands and a lamp standing outside. 

    "Be patient with Mother Nature  because she doesn’t care about any of us," was how Murray rationalized the bizarre bouts of weather. "Let her do her thing and then when she’s ready to let you do your thing, she will."

    Cleanup crews already overextended from Hurricane Sandy are working around the clock to clear snow that recently fell across the region, causing more people to lose power. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    Murray did have an eye on Friday’s weather forecast, noting that "it’s going to be 60 degrees, this is all going to melt." 

    By late Thursday, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island had their power fully restored. New York and New Jersey saw a drop in the number of customers affected by the nor'easter. Now about 60,000 customers are without power between the two states because of the storm; more than half a million remain without power total in the two states, including outages caused by Sandy.

    West Virginia, however, has struggled to bring power customers back online.

    The overnight nor’easter boasted wind gusts of more than 50 mph and dropped heavy snow on already-weakened tree limbs, leading to new power outages. 

    In New Jersey alone, 167,000 homes and businesses lost power overnight, Gov. Chris Christie said Thursday. "This sets us back about a day" in terms of getting all power restored, he added. 

    "We're right back to the same situation," Kirk Walker of Hackensack, N.J., told NBCNewYork.com after power went out for the third time at his home since Sandy struck. 

    "They said it was gonna be a rough winter," Walker added. "Sign of things to come, I guess."

    Officials there on Thursday said they had convinced the local utility to scrap its policy requiring that each home without power be inspected before power is restored, Newsday.com reported. 

    With the new outages, some 700,000 customers were without power across the Northeast around midday. That number was reduced to some 600,000 by early evening.

    Are you left in the lurch after Sandy? 

    Record snowfall totals were recorded across the area:

    • New York’s Central Park received 4.4 inches of snow on Wednesday -- a record for a Nov. 7 and the earliest 4-inch total in the park's history, NBCNewYork.com reported. By Thursday morning the total had reached 4.7 inches.
    • Newark, N.J., got 6 inches by Thursday -- more snow in 24 hours than during any previous November on record.
    • Bridgeport, Conn., received 3.5 inches of snow, beating the Nov. 7 record of 2 inches set in 1953.

    Some areas inland got 12 to 13 inches of snow.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "This is a classic nor'easter," NBC meteorologist Al Roker said on TODAY, "just very early."

    PhotoBlog: Hot meals on Staten Island

    Conditions were still miserable Thursday morning. In New York City, winds were around 25 mph and it was 36 degrees with showers forecast before sunny skies on Friday.

    In New Jersey, parts of which saw 9 inches of snow, police said ice and snow contributed to the deaths of two people in a car whose driver was speeding, NBCPhiladelphia reported.

    Two people also died in Connecticut in traffic accidents attributed to snow, The Associated Press reported.

    Full NBC coverage of Sandy's aftermath

    Hundreds were evacuated ahead of the nor'easter, some because of flooding fears and others due to post-Sandy logistics.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Medeleine Dobriner was moved by the Red Cross to the Manresa Jesuit Center shelter on Staten Island so that her earlier shelter, a school, could reopen.

    Medeleine Dobriner of New Dorp on Staten Island was among the latter -- having to move because her shelter was in a school that was reopening.

    "This is my third shelter and usually change is good," Dobriner, 66, told NBC News, "but not in this case."

    Throughout the region, people wore coats indoors as they endured yet another night without heat.

    "I thought I was lucky when power was restored last Thursday, but last night it went out again," said Michael Platt, an electrician from Toms River, N.J., who estimated a foot of snow fell in his area. "The kids have been home for nearly two weeks and I'm not working, and when I'm not working I'm not making any money. This hasn't been easy." 

    "Can you believe this? Enough is enough," added Cindy Casey, whose Belle Harbor home one block from the beach in the Rockaways was swamped by Sandy, as she looked out at the snow blanketing the neighborhood devastated by flooding and fire. 

    Some of those who had weathered Sandy told NBCNewYork.com they felt like a cruel joke was being played on them.

    "Kind of laughing about it at this point," said Danny Arnedos, of Oyster Bay, Long Island. "To go from a hurricane to a nor'easter and driving in the snow in 10 days is pretty unbelievable."

    "I am waiting for the locusts and pestilence next," New Jersey Gov. Christie said Wednesday. 

    Coastal flooding proved minimal, but commuter bus and train services were disrupted by the storm, with the Long Island Rail Road briefly shutting down all operations to the city's eastern suburbs on Wednesday night.

    Gasoline remained in short supply in the New York City area, where Mayor Michael Bloomberg on Thursday announced rationing based on odd and even number license plates.

    Official: NY disaster chief fired over tree removal

    Airports saw 1,600 canceled flights on Wednesday due to the storm. Some 600 more flights were scratched Thursday, according to the flight tracking service FlightAware. The majority of those are in the New York area.

    The losses from Superstorm Sandy are still rough, but New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Thursday he had seen a report estimating $50 billion in damage and economic losses across the region, with $33 billion in New York state.

    "That's a staggering number," he said.

    Slideshow: Recovering after Sandy

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    A snowstorm hits the Northeast as residents are still struggling to pick up the pieces after Superstorm Sandy.

    Launch slideshow

    NBC's John Makely as well as Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • 1 in 31 no more: Gay rights movement ends dismal record
    • Governor to potheads: 'Don't break out the Cheetos'
    • Report: Dad says he put poison on dead son's pizza
    • Zoo officials: Toddler's death in Pittsburgh shows no zoo is 100 percent safe
    • Nor'easter threatens 'flying debris,' up to foot of snow in Sandy's wake
    • Post Superstorm Sandy, travelers prepare for a busy Thanksgiving

    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    584 comments

    Where is "The chosen one" and Fema??.......Oh wait. His sasquatch and the Quatchettes are probably on vacation on the taxpayers dime.

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  • 5
    Nov
    2012
    12:27pm, EST

    Parting with life's props: A tough cleanup begins in Breezy Point

    Residents of Breezy Point, N.Y., are beginning the long hard task of rebuilding their community, pumping water, clearing debris and reflecting on what they've lost.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    BREEZY POINT, N.Y. — The Allens hauled out the fridge, board games and the many other everyday objects that were the props of their lives on Thetford Avenue before Superstorm Sandy flooded their bungalow and turned their world upside down.

    The possessions were piled high on their deck on Sunday in front of their one-story home, which now has a slight but noticeable tilt. Many of them were headed for the dump, but they were determined to keep the most important ones, such as a heart-shaped photo of KeriLynn Allen’s deceased mother, Ann Marie McCarron, who owned the home before her daughter and husband bought it upon her death six years ago.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    "We both went house shopping together and as soon we walked in here, we fell in love with this house," Allen, 41, said Friday of the mother-daughter search for a home 16 years ago. "We both said, 'This is it,' you know. We knew there was no more searching, no more looking, it was done. So, it’s hard to see it in this shape."


    A difficult cleanup has begun in Breezy Point, a tight-knit community nestled between Jamaica Bay and the Atlantic Ocean in a small corner New York City, days after Hurricane Sandy unleashed raging floods that damaged thousands of homes and triggered an inferno that burned more than 100 others.

    Outside of Manhattan, New York residents are still facing a power outage as temperatures drop and the region braces for another storm. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    Some families can get inside their homes, while others are still waiting for the waters to recede to make a first assessment of the damage. Still others have nothing to clean up because their homes were consumed by the six-alarm fire that blazed for hours.

    KeriLynn Allen

    KeriLynn Allen, 41, broke down into tears after seeing this heart-shaped photo of her deceased mother, Ann Marie McCarron, with Allen's nephew on the floor of her flooded bungalow in Breezy Point.

    Over the weekend, the Sanitation Department began removing storm debris, an important milestone because the community had no dumpsters to throw out the spoiled food and soaked rugs and furniture. But a lot of the work is being left up to the people of Breezy Point and their bands of friends, as it is elsewhere in the disaster zone.

    Related stories

    • 'We'll figure out a way': Breezy Point looks ahead
    • Wind, flames, Our Fathers: Inside story of Breezy Point's terrible night
    • 'Don't leave us': Breezy Point residents wonder when help will come after Sandy
    • Off-duty firefighter rescued 9 people, a parrot and a few dogs in Hurricane Sandy

    "I was a basket case for the past couple of days but, you know, you come in here and you’ve got to put on your big girl pants and … you have to get through it," said Allen, who barely escaped the floodwaters during the night of Oct. 29 with her husband, Drew, and 12-year-old son, Ryan. "This is the first step in getting things together."

    Residents are concerned about the threat to their water-logged homes posed by toxic black mold. Many are emptying out their first floors, including ripping out dry wall, floor panels and sheet rock, in a bid to salvage them.

    In front of the nearby home of Rod and Anna Court, a slab of wood with the message "1 day at a time" painted on it leaned against the open hood of an SUV.

    David Friedman / NBC News

    KeriLynn and Drew Allen clean their flood-ravaged Breezy Point, N.Y., bungalow.

    "We just got to do one day at a time because if you start thinking about it, it gets too depressing in the long term," said Dan Court, a 56-year-old nutritionist, who was helping his parents — Rod, 80, Anna, in her late 70s — clean their home, concentrating for the moment on mopping tiles with bleach.

    Court began to list how many of the extended family’s Breezy Point homes were damaged, stopping when he got to eight. Then he started laughing.

    "It’s a total disaster," said Court, who lives in Yorktown, a suburb north of New York City. "That’s what I’m saying, you can’t think that far. It's … unbelievable."

    He noted one concern of many family members is what they should and shouldn’t do, "whether they’re hurting themselves, shooting themselves in the foot" regarding insurance claims.

    David Friedman / NBC News

    KeriLynn Allen looks through a family photo album rescued from the family's flooded home.

    That concern also was raised by Ann Marie Campbell, who was cleaning out the flooded first floor of the nearby home of her 85-year-old mother, Kathleen.

    "We’re trying to figure out what’s going on and what to do. I don’t know what to do, do you like save this, wipe it down with bleach?" Campbell asked as she cleaned furniture on Friday. "We’re really not being guided what to do … because I think the people who would be guiding us (the community’s cooperative board) also lost their houses."

    The uncertainty of the road ahead is something that the people of Breezy Point, a tight-knit community founded more than a century ago by Irish immigrants, will have to come to terms with, said the Rev. Msgr. Michael Curran of St. Thomas More Catholic Church, where many residents and their pets — cats, dogs and birds — took shelter during the storm.

    "We’re still making this up as we go along. Nobody knows exactly where we’re going. … It’s not going to be easy," Curran said after Sunday Mass. "The image I am using is like a very extended experience of Lent, that we go from ashes literally and water, to new and better life. And I think God will see us through it, and the nature of this community … will pull everybody through."

    There have been some laughs as the cleanup proceeded, with Campbell joking about her Irish mother’s obsession with the Kennedy clan, as demonstrated by her hand-painted watercolors of the family. Dan Court’s brother, Ken, said he has been dealing with requests for offbeat items from relatives, such as brass knobs on a cabinet door, a check and a metal box.

    David Friedman / NBC News

    A bag of ruined possessions goes out the door of the Breezy Point, N.Y., home of Drew and KeriLynn Allen.

    There has been heartache, too.

    Mary Ann Dalton was out on Sunday to support her parents, Chris and Tom, who are in their mid-80s and have lived in Breezy Point for 55 years. They’re house is "down to wire and boards," with the couple having lost everything, she said.

    "I was sitting there taking pictures of … my parents' dresser that they had when they were first married and it just went in the (dump) truck … and crumpled up as they do that turning thing. So it’s really been tough," she said, her voice trembling.

    The Allens are hoping they can return to live in their bungalow, which KeriLynn said they bought after her mother’s death at 60 to "feel her presence."

    "We almost died. … So, all of this is, this is nothing," she said of the aftermath. "I was praying to every angel I had in heaven to save us and somebody was with us that night."

    "I just sat there with my family and we just prayed out loud, and I called in my parents and my grandparents," she said. "I said one of them had to be with me, so I think my mother was working overtime."

    Comments? Questions? Email the reporter at miranda.leitsinger@msnbc.com

    More Sandy coverage from NBCNews.com:

    • Nor'easter may 'add insult to injury' following Sandy 
    • Fuel shortage expected to last for days
    • 'Free gas'  causes rush in NY; state then tells public to wait
    • Concert to help Sandy victims raises nearly $23 million, Red Cross says
    • PhotoBlog: Cleanup, discovery and determination in Breezy Point
    • NYC Marathon canceled
    • Cops: NYC man pulls pistol after cutting in line for gas
    • Deadliest zone: Staten Island reels from devastation
    • Your Sandy photos: Show us the heroes in your life
    • Sandy's aftermath: How you can help
    • Full NBC News coverage of Sandy aftermath

    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    67 comments

    I was in Christchurch after the earthquake of Feb 2011. Students from all over NZ showed up to help cart away the mounds of silt that came bubbling up through the ground due to liquefaction. People left hoses out by the street so those without water could fill up.

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  • 1
    Nov
    2012
    1:15pm, EDT

    War veterans hit Sandy's front lines for rescues, cleanup

    Courtesy Mike Lee

    Team Rubicon's "DC Response Team" clears a tree in the Capitol Hill nieghborhood. Left to right: Lourdes Tiglao, Neil Landsberg, Kiara Baginski, Dan Pick.

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    Up to his armpits in flood water, flanked by darkened buildings and submerged vehicles, Iraq veteran Peter Meijer felt oddly at home Monday night as he trudged through the streets of Brooklyn at the height of Sandy's fury: "The right place at the right time with the right mission."

    With a fellow veteran at his side, Meijer had driven a van from a Brooklyn high school-turned-evacuation shelter to the Gerritsen Beach neighborhood, stopping only when the van's tires met the storm surge. From there, the pair went on foot. With 911 phone lines down, the Army reservist was trying to reach and rescue a man who had climbed into his attic with his dog to escape the rising tide. Back at the shelter, the man's wife — who had been on the phone with him — pleaded Meijer to try to save him.

    A team of volunteers who were also hit hard by the storm, put their needs aside to help neighbors with first aid and food. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "She said the water was up to his knees, then it was up to his waist. Nobody could reach the police. We were 15 minutes away. I peer-pressured my partner, Marvin Avilez, into going out there," said Meijer, 24, who served in Iraq during 2010 and 2011. "When the road ended, we hopped out. On the way, we found a dude wading in the water, pulling a row boat. He was a former Marine recon guy, going house to house to rescue folks.

    "It was during the brunt of the storm. There were eerie moments when the wind was blowing 70 miles per hour, then where it went down to nothing, then back to 70. Water up to my chest. Cars under water. It was like 'End of Days' stuff out there." 


    Meijer is one of 50 veterans dispatched this week into storm-battered areas from Team Rubicon — a nonprofit, 4,000-member, all-volunteer army composed almost entirely of former military members who served after 9/11, many of them in combat. They typically join forces with federal and local authorities to help during natural catastrophes such as the April 2011 outbreak of tornadoes in Tuscaloosa, Ala., that killed more than 340 people. 

    The multiple ways in which the military is helping New Jersey and New York recover from Hurricane Sandy. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Loosely formed in 2010 to aid earthquake victims in Haiti, Team Rubicon quickly melded into a tightly run disaster-relief machine with a military style and sharp focus, said Matt Pelak, the organization's director of strategic partnerships. He was deployed to Iraq in 2004 with the U.S. Army. 

    "In Haiti, they realized they were onto something," said Pelak, now a full-time firefighter and paramedic in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. "They were realizing: We’re home from war and we have these skills and we’re good in that environment.  

    Slideshow: Sandy slams into East Coast

    David Friedman / NBC News

    Superstorm Sandy made landfall Monday evening on a destructive and deadly path across the Northeast.

    Launch slideshow

    "In Tuscaloosa, a ton more veterans showed up than we expected. At end of day, we got around the campfire and talked about our deployment experiences. We realized we're not just helping other Americans, we're also helping each other, giving each other self confidence, giving direction."

    In the wake of the superstorm, people are banding together across New York City and New Jersey, offering power, food and even Halloween fun to their neighbors who have been devastated by wind and floods. NBC's Jenna Bush Hager reports.

    Team Rubicon has engaged in roughly 50 more missions since the tornadoes. The group says it has "a good relationship" with the Federal Emergency Management Agency and with local authorities, emphasizing that it "doesn't freelance." 

    "We have our little niche and that's what we stick to," Pelak said. "We utilize military-style plans and military-style leaderships to be more effective with less overhead and less bureaucracy, to be fast. Our teams are good at improvising and adapting. That’s what veterans do best."

    Team Rubicon had a pre-existing relationship with the New York City Office of Emergency Management, which asked the veterans to help staff the city's command center and to problem-solve issues at some rescue shelters: lack of food, no power, people not getting along, Pelak said. Team Rubicon members arrived from Pennsylvania, Delaware, Virginia and Connecticut to help storm victims access their homes, help towns do damage assessment, and help clear debris from roadways and yards — in New York, Washington, D.C., and other eastern towns. 

    NBC's Katy Tur reports from Hoboken, N.J., where water is covering much of the city.

    Meijer, who lives in Manhattan, joined his Team Rubicon colleagues on Saturday in New York. By Wednesday, he estimates that he'd since had about eight total hours of sleep. 

    While helping smooth out operations at a Brooklyn shelter, Meijer met the frantic woman who told him about her trapped husband — a man in his 60s who has hip trouble. 

    "The whole reason you get involved in an organization like this is to not sit on the sidelines," Meijer said. 

    Drenched and peering through the darkness, they eventually found the couple's house in Brooklyn.

    Once inside, they saw that the flowing water already had topped the kitchen chairs. The man was indeed tucked into a crawlspace but debris from the storm surge was blocking the attic door. The veterans yanked the door open and freed the man and his dog. They eventually put him into the Marine's row boat and pulled him back to drier streets where he stepped into the van. 

    "We were able to bring him to the hurricane shelter to be with his wife and puppy," Meijer said. "It was cute." 

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • 'Pure mayhem' as New York City tries to get back to work
    • Wind, flames, Our Fathers: The inside story of Breezy Point's terrible night
    • NYC-area airports up and running, albeit slowly
    • New York trick-or-treaters defy Sandy to celebrate Halloween
    • As National Guard comes to rescue, so do NJ residents — with power outlets
    • How to avoid post-storm insurance and repair scams
    • For some New Yorkers, it's back to business as usual
    • New Jersey investigating reports of price gouging
    • Your Sandy photos: Show us the heroes in your life
    • Sandy's aftermath: How you can help

    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    57 comments

    Military Veterans all over are usually the vanguard when disasters hit the community. After numerous typhoons on Guam in the mid to late 1980s, we helped clear debris, fallen palm trees etc from local areas in Tamuning and other towns in the Andersen AFB area. Welcome home Veterans and "hand salute" …

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    Explore related topics: washington, flooding, military, d-c, new-york-city, veterans, featured, brooklyn, sandy, superstorm, rescue-missions, team-rubicon, hurricane-sandy, superstorm-sandy
  • 1
    Nov
    2012
    6:37am, EDT

    Wind, flames, Our Fathers: The inside story of Breezy Point's terrible night

    David Friedman / NBC News

    Neighbors Bob Reilly, left, and Jim McGovern embrace among the burned-out remains of their Breezy Point, N.Y., homes on Wednesday.

    By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, NBC News

    BREEZY POINT, N.Y. —  As Hurricane Sandy turned the streets of this community into raging rivers on Monday evening, one company of volunteer firefighters ditched their rescue boats and sought refuge in the community center. Inside they found another bunch of volunteer firefighters, also stranded by rising water, who asked, "Are you here to rescue us?"

    That was shortly before 70-mph winds blew embers the size of baseballs through the heart of this close-knit community on the Rockaway Peninsula in New York City’s Queens borough.

    Interviews with residents and firefighters on Wednesday provided a more complete account of how the disaster unfolded in this beachside town when Sandy blasted ashore.

    In a community where firefighters are demigods, where a memorial at the end of the point honors more than 30 residents who lost their lives at the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, three companies of volunteer firefighters were overwhelmed by flooding and an inferno that destroyed more than 100 houses. Yet they fought the elements all night, saving many people and protecting houses on the perimeter of the burn zone, including the home of a 9/11 widow.


    David Friedman / NBC News

    The Rockaway Point Fire Department, one of three volunteer fire houses in Breezy Point, was unable to get its flooded trucks running during the storm. The men took to boats to pull people from the water.

    When the water hit about 5:30 p.m., quickly disabling the fire engines and ambulances of the Rockaway Point Fire Department, its volunteers abandoned their firehouse. But when a call came in to rescue a wheelchair-bound elderly woman trapped in a flooded house, Lt. Jimmy Morton and four of his men put on their wetsuits and headed out in two motorboats — a 14-foot inflatable Zodiac and a 15-foot fiberglass Wheeler, steaming up the road into a hurricane.

    Breezy Point residents search for the past, look to the future

    The idyllic beachfront town of Breezy Point, N.Y., suffered through 9/11 and a devastating jet crash nearby. But this tight-knit community is determined to carry on. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports.

    The Breezy Point peninsula was inundated, the waters of the Atlantic Ocean merging with the waters of Jamaica Bay. Electrical transformers arced and sparked in the sky. Streets were disjointed as entire blocks of houses were shifted off their foundations. The winds blew 3-foot waves into the boats. Debris wrapped around the propellers. Finally they had to turn back, ditching their boats at the community center, crawling up a ladder and through a window to safety. They still don’t know what happened to the woman in the wheelchair.

    Inside the community center, known as the Clubhouse, the Rockaway Point crew found 20 firefighters from the Point Breeze Volunteer Fire Department, who had abandoned their own firehouse next door when it flooded. They were tending to about 20 people, mostly elderly and disabled. All were huddled on a stage where schoolchildren usually put on summer plays, with rising water lapping just a few inches below the lip of the stage.

    David Friedman / NBC News

    Chairs sit on the elevated stage of The Clubhouse, where Point Breeze Volunteer Fire Chief Marty Ingram and fellow firefighters huddled with rescued residents to escape rising floodwaters from Hurricane Sandy.

    The Point Breeze fire chief, Marty Ingram, a retired Air Force helicopter pilot, had just finished leading the group in a prayer, an Our Father in the candlelight, when the Rockaway Point firefighters arrived.

    A glow in the sky
    "I was scared. We all were," Ingram said. "I told everyone, ‘We're beach people. Just imagine it's a summer day and you're standing in three feet of water at the beach, and relax.’" Afraid they would drown when water got higher than the windows, blocking escape, Ingram decided that if the water reached two inches on the stage, the men would take down the Christmas lights strung across the ceiling and use them as a rope line to try to cross the rapidly flowing Point Breeze Avenue to reach a two-story house. He finished a second Our Father, when everyone agreed the water might have receded a little bit.

    David Friedman / NBC News

    Point Breeze Volunteer Fire Chief Marty Ingram. "I told everyone, 'We're beach people. Just imagine it's a summer day and you're standing in three feet of water at the beach, and relax.'"

    It was about 8:30, just before high tide, when they first noticed a glow in the sky.

    Breezy Point: 'Whatever is not flooded is on fire'

    Glenn Serafin had been one of the first to see the flames, near his home on Atlantic Avenue, on the ocean side of town in the knotted area of tightly grouped houses known as the Wedge, where the streets are as wide as sidewalks, the lots only 20 by 43 feet, the houses seven to 10 paces wide. He had been tending his pump, ignoring repeated phone calls from the community safety office insisting that everyone evacuate. He was expecting a few feet of water in his basement, as had happened in previous hurricanes, but he allows that "my thinking was flawed." He took a nap about 6:30 p.m., but was awakened by water in his basement, which had risen  neck high. Then the electrical outlets started popping from the salt water, and he heard the rush of water moving up the street.

    Then, after 8 o'clock, out his back window, he spotted the fire, in one of the bungalows behind the larger beachfront house of Rep. Bob Turner (who got his job after Anthony Weiner lost his for sending nude photos and risque text messages). The fire leaped to the congressman's house, then to the house next door, where an older lady has kept a parrot for 50 years, the one that entertains children by repeating some choice words it learned from her dockworker husband. Then it jumped again and again, driven by the powerful southeast wind. The phones were out. The cell phones were out. Serafin used a garden hose and a margarita pitcher to throw water on his plastic storm shutters.

    Read more Sandy coverage on NBCNews.com

    Everyone knows everyone in the Wedge, often hanging out together at the Sugar Bowl beachfront bar. When a friend once asked Serafin, ‘Do you know Alice” he replied, “Oh, yes. She's my wife's brother's wife's brother's wife."

    The people here own the houses, but not the land. They live in a gated co-op, some here full time, but most, like Serafin, staying mainly in the summer. A bungalow sells for $350,000, a larger house up to $800,000 or a million in the overheated New York real estate market, but these are mostly middle-class families, heavily Irish-Catholic, enjoying a unique community nicknamed the Irish Riviera. The cars pushed around by the waves carried window stickers from Holy Cross and Georgetown. At the end of each block, the water lapped over yard shrines to Mary and Joseph.

    At the swamped Clubhouse, the firefighters could see a firestorm of embers driven by the winds, a volcano erupting toward them in a hurricane. The smoke drove more people out of their houses, even those who had been safe on second floors.

    Devastated NY community built by firefighters burned beyond their reach

    Across a flooded parking lot, Jack O'Meara and his wife, Aileen, were waving flashlights to alert the firefighters. The men from Rockaway got back into their boats, dodging concrete flower pots in the streets. These men — Michael Valentine, Brandon Reilly, Brian Doyle, Michael Kahlau and Jimmy Morton — went back and forth, pulling in family after family, including the O'Mearas, along with their grown children, John and Trish, and their two cats, Leon and Bright. The firefighters plucked more people abandoning Olive Walk ("Life is good," the sign says) and Roosevelt Walk ("walk softly").

    Now the firefighters were worried about embers setting fire to the wooden roof of the Clubhouse, which was starting to fill with smoke. After a third Our Father, they returned to the Point Breeze firehouse and were finally able to get their fire engines started. They began using them to ferry the waterlogged band at the Clubhouse to a more-secure shelter at the flood-damaged St. Thomas More Roman Catholic Church.

    Breezy Point, N.Y., suffered devastating losses as a result of Sandy. NBC's Mara Schiavocampo reports.

    The community's third company of volunteers, 10 men from the Volunteer Fire Department of Roxbury at the other end of the point, also saw the glow from the fire, but they, too, were in no position to respond. They were on the second floor of their firehouse, driven upstairs by the flood. Their fire trucks sat in four feet of water. All the radios were down, the phones dead. Only when the water went down a couple of feet could they drive to the fire.

    A fire marshal whose home is in the Wedge, Kieran Burke, said it was about an hour, after he first saw the glow and smoke, before anyone began fighting the fire. Even then, until about 11 p.m., he said, there was only one hose directed at it.

    Slideshow: Sandy slams East Coast

    The assistant chief on scene from the New York Fire Department, Joseph Pfeifer, the same first chief to arrive at the World Trade Center on 9/11, said the department came as soon as it was called, though travel on the peninsula was slow in the high water. The timetable will be sorted out in the investigation, but Pfeifer said what's sure is that the city firefighters found an inferno, with at least 20 homes ablaze by the time they arrived. Telephone poles were on fire. Sinkholes opened up in the sandy soil, swallowing cars. Hydrants were hard to find under the seawater and had no water pressure, so the men "drafted" ocean water. Through six alarms, with nearly 300 firefighters working until mid-day Tuesday, they were able to do little more than hold the edges of the fire.

    Holding the line at a widow's home
    The volunteers from Point Breeze rode to the fire in the bucket of a payloader tractor, fighting alongside the Rockaway volunteers and the paid professionals until 5 in the morning. At one point they worked especially hard to save a large tan house facing the ocean. That's Sheila Scandole's house. Her husband, Robert, was a stock trader with Cantor Fitzgerald who died at the World Trade Center, and they both grew up in Breezy Point.

    David Friedman / NBC News

    Kieran Burke, a fire marshal, surveys the burned-out remains of his Breezy Point home on Wednesday. He was nearby at his mother's home, which survived but was flooded, when the fire started.

    Slideshow: Surviving Sandy, twice

    When the sun came up, the Sugar Bowl bar was gone. Kieran Burke's home was down, too, in the middle of a charred landscape the size of two football fields. Firefighters went house by house through the community, but so far found no one dead. The congressman's house was down, its white metal railing decorating a clump of debris at the edge of the burn zone. No one was quite sure what happened to the parrot next door. (Update: The parrot seems to have been rescued by an off-duty firefighter.)

    But the house of Sheila Scandole, the 9/11 widow, remained, scarred but standing, staring out at the beach and the calming Atlantic Ocean beyond.

    More Sandy coverage from NBCNews.com:

    • As National Guard comes to rescue, so do NJ residents — with power outlets
    • For some New Yorkers, it's back to business as usual
    • For some who stayed behind in New York, it wasn't too bad
    • New Jersey investigating reports of price gouging
    • Subway-dependent businesses see traffic slow to halt
    • Fed up with waiting, air travelers rush rental car counters
    • NY's Bellevue Hospital evacuates patients as power stays cut
    • Off-duty NYPD officer dies saving his family from Sandy
    • Toppled tree exposes skeletal remains, cement box
    • Your Sandy photos: Show us the heroes in your life

    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    75 comments

    Bless these men, courage my friends is a rare bird in catastrophic situations such as this. These men, they went out into the storm to rescue someone, end up stranded but still mange to rescue others on their way and throughout the night.

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  • 31
    Oct
    2012
    1:13pm, EDT

    Flames rage anew in Mantoloking, NJ, barrier island town ravaged by Sandy

    Helicopter aerials show an out-of-control blaze burning in Mantoloking, N.J., a community left devastated by Superstorm Sandy. TODAY's Natalie Morales reports.

    By NBC News staff

    A section of Hurricane Sandy-ravaged Mantoloking, N.J., was ablaze again Wednesday morning, two days after 14 homes burned in the affluent barrier island enclave.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Video from NBCNewYork.com showed flames possibly fueled by broken natural gas lines raging in the town about 50 miles east of Trenton on Wednesday.


    A large cluster of flames could be seen as smaller fires spread out from it, TODAY’s Natalie Morales reported.

    Ocean County Emergency Management officials said they believed ruptured natural gas lines caused the flames to rekindle Wednesday.

    Impassable roads hindered Bricktown firefighters’ efforts to reach the blazes, NBCNewYork.com reported.

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com 

    Morales, who observed the fires from a helicopter early Wednesday, described the area as devastated.

    Obama to visit stricken NJ

    “What was shoreline and beautiful, waterfront properties were completely pushed back, gone, and covered by sand,” Morales reported.

    “This is part of a barrier island; it’s very much cut off,” she said.

    Slideshow: Sandy slams into East Coast

    Superstorm Sandy made landfall Monday evening on a destructive and deadly path across the Northeast.

    Launch slideshow

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    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • Blaze devastates NY community built by firefighters
    • Tree toppled by Sandy exposes skeletal remains
    • Romney training manual for poll watchers causes stir
    • Sandy leaves NYC subway system licking its wounds
    • Colorado teen charged as adult in killing of Jessica Ridgeway, 10

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    12 comments

    The people that houses burned will receive a insurance settlement check... Those people that houses flooded will receive NOTHING.

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    Explore related topics: hurricane, flooding, storm, new-jersey, sandy, superstorm
  • 31
    Oct
    2012
    5:51am, EDT

    Devastated NY community built by firefighters burned beyond their reach

    In Breezy Point, N.Y., a Queens neighborhood that lost more than 100 homes, endured catastrophic damage. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By Bob Sullivan, Columnist, NBC News

    Breezy Point, in New York City's Queens borough, was built in part by New York City firefighters and their families in the early 1900s. A large section of it was destroyed by Hurricane Sandy, in part because firefighters couldn't get there.

    The idyllic community of around 3,800 homes – many wooden bungalows, packed tightly together – sits on an isolated spit of land, connected to mainland New York City by two bridges. It enjoys both bayside and ocean views, a luxury that makes it a target for both New Yorkers and every large storm that roars ashore from the Atlantic. But it wasn't rain or wind that did in Breezy Point – it was fire and logistics.


    The idyllic beachfront town of Breezy Point, N.Y., suffered through 9/11 and a devastating jet crash. But this tight-knit community is determined to carry on despite being ravaged by Superstorm Sandy. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports.

    At the height of Sandy's fury late Monday, when a devastating blaze ignited in the heart of the community, firefighters were slowed by flooded roadways and other weather-related challenges, finally requiring help from the National Guard to get through. As they were working out an approach, flames fueled by massive winds jumped from home to home, consuming family histories along with the buildings holding them. By the time the blaze was contained, more than 100 homes – and St. Genevieve's Catholic Church – were destroyed, ripping the heart out of the community.

    Breezy Point is sometimes called the Irish Riviera – or by its Gaelic name Cois Farraige, which means "By The Sea." Irish police and firefighters looking for affordable seaside homes rushed to build in the area when transportation to and from the city became readily available just over a century ago. It has remained one of the most Irish enclaves in America, with more than half the residents claiming Irish heritage, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. 

    Nicole Makridis, who lives in a ground-floor condominium in Breezy Point, across the street from Rockaway Beach, took this photo on Tuesday when she returned to assess the damage from Sandy. The dark band on the wall shows how high the floodwaters climbed in her unit.

    "If you are interested in learning anything — the bagpipes or the tin whistle or Irish dancing," Breezy Point is the place, Dolores Mulholland told the Irish Echo, a New York-based newspaper aimed at Irish immigrants, in a feature story on the neighborhood last year.

    Even Frank McCourt, the famed chronicler of Irish-American life who wrote "Angela's Ashes," once lived there, but few outsiders have the chance. Property rarely comes up for sale, and when it does, buyers must come up with a 50 percent down payment required by co-op rules. The Breezy Point Cooperative, which governs the area, pays for its own security force, and is one of the rare spots in New York City where the fire department is still run by volunteers. 

    They were no match for the record-breaking storm and fire that gutted the place early Tuesday morning. The blaze did not discriminate. Rep. Robert Turner, R-N.Y., who won a special election to replace disgraced former Rep. Anthony Weiner last year, lost his home in the blaze. So did state Conservative Party Chairman Mike Long.

    In Breezy Point, Queens, Sandy's flood damage was compounded by a massive fire, and the devastation was compared to post-WWII Berlin. NBC News' Hoda Kotb reports.

    Breezy Point was under mandatory evacuation orders when Sandy rolled in, so many residents spent Monday night watching terrified on television, or scanning the Internet, looking at distant images showing their beloved beach community engulfed by water and flames. They hoped friends and family got out in time, and hoped their homes could dodge the triple threat of wind, flood and fire. Few did.

    Mike Groll / AP

    This aerial photo shows burned-out homes in the Breezy Point section of the Queens borough New York after a fire on Oct. 30. The tiny beachfront neighborhood told to evacuate before Sandy hit New York burned down as it was inundated by floodwaters, transforming a quaint corner of the Rockaways into a smoke-filled debris field.

    'I can see a fire from my house'
    Max Countryman got an alarming text from his mother, Paula, in the early morning hours on Tuesday asking if there was a fire on Breezy Point. Paula and her partner had decided to ride the storm out, as she and Max had ridden out Hurricane Irene with little trouble last year.

    "I can see a fire from my house," the text said.

    Max had left his mother at her Bedford Avenue home only a day earlier, after scoring a ticket on one of the last pre-storm flights out of New York. Back home in San Francisco, after Paula's electricity, phone and Internet service went out, he had to rely on her texts, news reports and, finally, the Web.

    Breezy Point, N.Y., home to 9/11 responders who lost their lives, suffered devastating losses as a result of Sandy. NBC's Mara Schiavocampo reports.

    "I was just listening to the Fire Department scanner (online) all night," he said. "I listened to the progression of the fire, when it went from one alarm, to two, three, four, five, six alarms. ... It was horrible to listen to the traffic, hear another block is engulfed in flames, another block, and they just couldn't stop the progression."

    He took to Twitter to ask for help, but soon learned there was no way for his mother to get off the island. At first, he was more concerned about flooding.

    "I'm in contact with her. But there's probably not a lot to do but wait," he told one user. "There's a second floor and deck. And I suppose there's always the roof. But for now it's not that bad." 

    But quickly, fire became the bigger worry.

    "Breezy Point is in dire shape at the moment: between twelve and fifteen homes are on fire, a church is burning, and the FDNY is stuck," he wrote. A little later, he tweeted: "@FDNY what's the status on the 3-alarm in Breezy Point? My mom is stuck (on) Bedford Ave, fire is not too far away." Then, this, a moment later:  "@FDNY ... What should people stuck on the point do as the fire approaches their homes?"

    About the same time, Chelsea Taylor was sweating out the storm and fire from her home in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. For Taylor's family, Breezy Point has been like an extended family hotel for the past two decades. Her sister Nicole Makridis lives on Bayside Avenue; her aunt, uncle and their two kids live next door.

    Courtesy Nicole Makridis

    The boardwalk that used to grace Rockaway Beach washed across the street and ended up at the front door of Breezy Point resident Makridis and her neighbors.

    "I was basically raised over in Breezy Point because of a beach club over there and it was absolutely beautiful," she said. "I've spent endless summers over there and a lot of my high school friends live over there."

    Before Sandy’s landfall, Makridis had evacuated to Taylor's home, but the other family household stayed behind. Taylor found out during the night that parents and kids – a 3-year-old and a 9-year-old – were evacuated by boat, but she couldn't find out where. 

    "(I) found out they were evacuated by boat to the clubhouse. I have no idea where that is though," she told NBCNews on Tuesday. "It was the 9-year-old's birthday on Saturday," she added.

    The uncertainty and fear were felt by many others with roots in Breezy Point.

    Chris Gavagan is a filmmaker living in Brooklyn who grew up on Breezy Point; his father and brother still live there. His father retreated to ride out Sandy in Brooklyn, but brother Rob stayed behind in Breezy Point. When Chris Gavagan discovered Max Countryman's tweets about this mother, the two shared notes and determined that Countryman's mother and Gavagan's brother were neighbors.

    "My brother (we haven't heard from since 8p) lives about 100ft away. The Army is involved now," Gavagan said on Twitter, referring to the National Guard. 

    Reading texts, monitoring fire scanner
    Countryman never lost contact with his mother  through the frightful night. While she couldn't place calls, text messages continued to work and her cellphone battery held out. He knew when her first floor filled with 4 feet of water. As the night wore on, he heard on the FDNY scanner activity that wind had blown the fire the opposite direction, away from his mother's house. Then, after the high tide waters receded, he figured she was out of immediate danger.


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    He still had no idea how to help her, however – and his mother and her partner didn't know what to do next. 

    "They were going to try to rent a car, or somehow get a car – my mom's partner hadn't heard from her mom, so they want to go into Brooklyn and check on her," he recalled. "But it's probably impossible for them to leave the house." 

    He reflected on his mother's decision to stay, and said it was complicated. Their first option was to evacuate, but the nearest family member's home – in "Zone A" in Brooklyn – was also under a mandatory evacuation order. The couple has two dogs and a bird, making evacuation to anywhere else challenging. Such potentially life-threatening calculations were not unusual. The Wall Street Journal reported that perhaps 60 percent of Breezy Point residents tried to ride out the storm there.

    Ramin Talaie / EPA

    A firefighter garden gnome stands as a lonely sentinel if a swath of Breezy Point, N.Y., destroyed by fire on Monday as Hurricane Sandy battered the community.

    PhotoBlog: Evacuations continue and residents take stock in destroyed Breezy Point

    Nonetheless, as the weather began to clear on Tuesday, he wondered aloud why his mother wasn't getting more help leaving her badly damaged home.

    "You'd think the National Guard would want to step in and evacuate, maybe make an attempt to get people out at dawn. But right now I don't know what they are going to do," he said.

    Gavagan got good news, too, as he was able to make it to Breezy Point Tuesday to check on his brother in person. 

    Chris Gavagan

    Rob Gavagan and his father, Donald, assess the damage from superstorm Sandy in front of the elder Gavagan's Breezy Point home on Tuesday.

    "(My brother) rode it out in a house where taking on water was the concern. He had a few feet (of water) in the house," he said.

    Perhaps for the best, he said, brother Rob didn't know about the fire because he was too busy caring for their home. 

    A picture Gavagan sent to NBC News shows his father and brother already cleaning up debris around the house, carrying away a sign that reads, "Beach Officially Closed." He was able to let Countryman know that he'd seen his mother's home.

    "The sidewalks and areas around her house still have feet of water, but there is plenty of help now," he said. He also reported that the National Guard was on the scene, but didn't know if they were evacuating residents.

    Slideshow: Sandy slams into East Coast

    Superstorm Sandy made landfall Monday evening on a destructive and deadly path across the Northeast.

    Launch slideshow

    For others, relief was delayed and tempered by the loss of treasured memories. 

    Chelsea Taylor was still waiting late Tuesday to hear where her uncle, aunt and their children ended up, assuming they were OK but worrying nonetheless. Her sister was able to make her way back to Breezy Point to get see the damage, but that did nothing to lighten her mood.

    "Looking at the pictures my sister just showed me of her house is absolutely heartbreaking," she said. "Her whole house is completely flooded. "The flooding is unbearable. She lives on a floor level condo right across the street from the beach in Rockaway. … The boardwalk from the beach also washed up to right in front of her door."

    Lauren Pallini's family lives in a home on Breezy Point that was also flood damaged. 

    She spent Tuesday scheming how to get into the neighborhood so she could see the damage for herself. NBC News connected with her on Twitter as she started the trip over from Brooklyn. 

    "To Breezy now," she said. Then, in Twitterspeak, "#Soscared."

    An hour later, she'd seen the destruction.

    "There's no hope for my house. Can't stop crying. I literally lost everything," she wrote. "Everything is flooded and literally everything got wet so everything is ruined."

    Bob Sullivan writes The Red Tape Chronicles blog for NBC News. Follow him on Twitter at @RedTapeChron

    Share your photos with us
    We want to see the people that helped you during this time of crisis. Post pictures on Twitter or Instagram by tagging them #NBCNewsPics or upload photos using the form below. Use the caption or Tweet to explain why the person is a hero. Click here for more information

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • Sandy leaves trail of destruction, disbelief in its path
    • Volunteers rush in to help devastated region recover
    • 'There was no stopping it': Sandy's surge inundates northern NJ towns
    • Breezy point: 'Whatever is not flooded is on fire'
    • Sandy leaves NYC subway system, infrastructure licking its wounds
    • New York's post-Sandy divide: Those with power and those without
    • Stranded by Sandy, air travelers eager to change status
    • Sandy hammers Jersey Shore, levels homes, shreds boardwalks
    • By the numbers: Superstorm Sandy
    • Foot of snow: Sandy brings blizzard conditions to West Virginia
    • News sites knocked out as NYC data center floods
    • Storm seen as unlikely to delay election
    • Your images of Sandy's fury

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    113 comments

    At 64 years old, and a Gulf Coast resident who has been exposed to numerous hurricanes/storms over my lifetime, you need to realize when Mother Nature schedules herself to be in your neighborhood, skin and bones will not stop her, evacuate, let her do what she does, come back and re-build if you lik …

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  • 30
    Oct
    2012
    5:17pm, EDT

    Sandy leaves trail of destruction, disbelief in its path

    As New York slowly comes back to life, it's electrical power that divides the haves and have-nots. Gridlock also remains a concern, but subway service is slowly beginning to resume and the New York Marathon is still slated to go forward. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    From the devastated New Jersey shore to eerily empty lower Manhattan, tens of millions of Americans lived through Sandy's fury and were trying to come to grips with its destruction as the storm waters slowly receded.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The impact of the storm was virtually without parallel in the densely populated tristate region of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, with its destructive winds, heavy flooding and raging fires. Farther afield, powerful gusts felled trees and knocked out power for up to 8.2 million residents across the eastern United States, while heavy snow made travel treacherous at higher elevations. Nationwide at least 47 were confirmed dead of storm-related causes.

    "This was literally the storm of our lifetime," said Longport, N.J., Mayor Nick Russo, as he surveyed the damage on debris-littered streets of his Atlantic coast town Tuesday. "No one has seen this type of damage, not even in the 1962 storm. The amount of sand, wood and concrete that has actually come up from the streets — it's not a good scene."

    Slideshow: Sandy slams into East Coast

    Superstorm Sandy made landfall Monday evening on a destructive and deadly path across the Northeast.

    Launch slideshow

    Two hundred miles to the north in Mastic Beach, N.Y., Donna Vollaro, 53, covered her face with her hands and sobbed as she walked through her ranch-style home, which had been inundated by several feet of water.


    The water had receded by Tuesday afternoon but left the Long Island house filled with mud. Everything inside destroyed.

    "My bed was floating around in three feet of water. The floors are buckled. The walls are caved in. Everything I own is gone," she said.

    Vollaro, who is disabled and unemployed, has no homeowner's insurance and said she recently spent her savings on renovating the home. Inside, the refrigerator lay on its side, the couch was soaked and the boiler was destroyed.

    "Now I have nowhere to go. Just the clothes on my back. That's what I have," she said.

    TODAY's Natalie Morales reports from Mantoloking, N.J., where an aerial view of the region shows fires burning and sand completely overtaking neighborhoods.

    'Like a tsunami'
    On New York's Coney Island, Mordechai Deutscher recalled watching floodwaters burst through the glass front doors of the Mermaid Manor Home for Adults, about two blocks from the famed boardwalk. Residents had been evacuated to upper floors.

    "Everything was fine and dandy yesterday until high tide," said Deutscher, 58, administrator of the home. "All of a sudden within five minutes it was like a tsunami."

    Sal and Lori Novello rode out the storm in their Long Island home, with candles providing the only light and a wind-up radio their connection to the outside world. Sal Novello, 50, said when water started rushing into their 5,000-square-foot Dutch colonial, "it sounded like Niagara Falls." They ended up with seven feet of water in the basement.

    NBC's Lester Holt reports from New Jersey, where the eye of Superstorm Sandy came ashore, ripping apart the coastline and leaving millions without power. President Obama is expected to tour the area Wednesday with Governor Christie.

    "They kind of warned us, and everybody knew it was coming," said Novello, a construction executive who lives in n Lindenhurst, N.Y. "Unfortunately it was everything they said it was."

    Ken Pagliarulo, a 34-year-old computer consultant in Lindenhurst, watched from his window Monday night as a house burned to the ground. Water filled his living room and totaled his car in the garage. He shut down the power, shut down the gas and ran generators for electricity.

    "Insane," he said.

    In Washington, D.C., as Sandy made landfall, Russ Kelley had two bad options: stay inside after a giant oak fell on his roof or dash outside where massive winds whipped three downed — and live — power lines not far from his front door.

    TODAY's Al Roker tours Atlantic City, N.J., with Mayor Lorenzo Langford, who re-addressed his feud about hurricane preparedness with Governor Chris Christie and laid out a plan to rebuild the city's iconic boardwalk that was torn apart by the storm.

    Jason Decrow / AP

    Firefighters work at the scene of a house fire in in Lindenhurst, New York, Monday.

    "Here's the thing — the fire department advised us all to come out of our row houses because of this tree lying on top. But then there's this hurricane outside with 60 mile-per-hour gusts, still pouring rain, a couple of live wires down in the street and another live wire out in my yard," said Kelley.

    "It seemed just safer to be in my house, tree and all," he said.

    So Kelley brushed aside the wet oak limbs and took his dog, Clinton, back into the living room — just below the fallen, 60-foot tree — as his TV screen continued to flash images of the historic storm that had just crashed into his life.

    Dangling crane
    In Manhattan, the experience was sometimes more surreal than perilous, after subways and businesses shut down and power outages afflicted much of the city.

    In the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan, retired local newspaper publisher Robert Trentlyon and his wife planned to stay in their darkened apartment Tuesday, although their son lives in a nearby complex that generates its own power. The Trentlyons had phone service and running water, and they routinely use the stairs to their brownstone apartment.

    Robert is 83, but, he said: "I'm a good 83," as he planned to grab a flashlight and check whether the building's basement had flooded.

    Timothy A. Clary / AFP - Getty Images

    An apartment building sits damaged in New York City's Chelsea neighborhood Monday.

    Some 900 guests were forced to evacuate Manhattan's Le Parker Meridien hotel because a storm-damaged crane dangled dangerously from a high-rise apartment building under construction nearby.

    Authorities said they were worried the wilted crane above would tumble down, perhaps pinball into neighboring buildings and crush everything in its path on the ground.

    The skyscraper, near Carnegie Hall, is officially called One57 but has been dubbed a "global billionaires' club" because its upper floors will include nine enormous, posh apartments — all sold to billionaires.

    "So all of our hurricane food is upstairs in our hotel, we're on a quest to find another hotel, and technically, I'm homeless," said Al Lewis, a guest from Denver who had been staying in the hotel with his wife and two children. "I'm homeless because of these billionaires next door. But, everyone's going to get displaced by a billionaire someday — it's just my time, I guess."

    Baking in the cold
    Several states to the south, freezing bands of the same gargantuan storm began dumping snow onto tiny Belington, W.Va., (population 1,900). By 3 a.m. Tuesday, when Charlotte Cummings arrived to work at the Goody Basket, her bakery, there was already six inches of snow on the ground.

    "Six inches is nothing for around here," Cummings said. "So I just started my day, started baking. Then, at about 8 a.m. the power went out because the snow is so wet and so many branches are coming down. Thankfully, I have gas so I could just keep going."

    Bebeto Matthews / AP

    The tail end of an SUV is perched on top of a mailbox in New York's Coney Island Monday.

    By morning, a foot of snow had fallen — and another foot or more was expected before the slow-moving storm lumbered on. After daylight, three young men walked past the Goody Basket and told Cummings: "This is the first open sign we've seen!"

    "They had some pepperoni rolls and some chocolate chip cookies," Cummings said. "I stayed open till about 2 o'clock (p.m.). In fact, before I came home, I just pulled the last pan out of the oven — three dozen pepperoni rolls."

    Kelvin Redmond, an accountant and associate minister at the Shiloh Baptist Church in Rockville Centre on Long Island, lives two blocks from the water in a three-story split level, but hadn't been able to get back to check on damage because the streets were still impassable.

    Ahead of the storm, he shut off all the power and moved his belongings, computers and irreplaceable items like photos to the third floor.

    "It looks like it may be a total loss," he said Tuesday. "But I still have my health and strength. I'm also a minister, so I still — it's going to be a good word on Sunday."

    NBC's Kari Huus, contributor Bill Briggs and The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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    322 comments

    During Katrina I stayed in our house alone less than a mile from the water. The house is on a slight hill about 16ft above sea level. Its a nice sturdy brick house. I ended up in about 2 feet of water inside the house and about 5 feet outside. Not sure how that happened to this day.

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    Explore related topics: hurricane, new-york, flooding, storm, new-jersey, featured, sandy, kari-huus, superstorm
  • 12
    Sep
    2012
    10:12am, EDT

    Storms flood parts of Vegas, Navajo land, Calif. desert communities, Utah town

    By NBC News and wire services

    Residents in four Southwest states were drying out Wednesday after thunderstorms flooded Las Vegas streets, stranded Navajo families in northern Arizona, left two mobile home communities in Southern California deep in water and caused a dike to fail in a Utah town. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    In the Las Vegas area, the Tuesday storms delayed flights, snarled traffic and prompted helicopter rescues of stranded motorists. A golf course worker was reported missing and a search for the man resumed Wednesday, NBC affiliate KSNV-TV reported.

    Television news video showed school buses inching along roads after school east of downtown Las Vegas, and muddy water up to the lower sills of windows of stucco homes in other neighborhoods.


    In southeast Las Vegas, authorities urged the residents of about 45 homes damaged by flooding to leave in case electrical fires are sparked. 

    Dozens of cars were swamped by water up to their headlights in a parking lot outside the Thomas & Mack sports arena at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

    Firefighters responded to more than 20 calls about people in stalled cars .

    John Locher / Las Vegas Review-Journal via AP

    University of Nevada students Ryan Klorman, left, and Markus Adams relax on inflatable pool toys in floodwater in a parking lot at UNLV in Las Vegas on Tuesday

    A Las Vegas police helicopter was dispatched during the height of the storm to pluck several people from swamped vehicles on roadways.

    More than 1.75 inches of rain were reported in downtown Las Vegas. The rainfall amounts put the region on pace to exceed the 4.5 inches of rain it normally gets in a year.

    Tuesday was also the wettest September day on record in Las Vegas, weather.com meteorologist Nick Wiltgen reported. 

    Thunderstorms leave Las Vegas under water as flash floods strand motorists and lightning strikes delay flights at McCarran International Airport. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Calif. mobile home parks hit hard
    In California's Coachella Valley, a thunderstorm on Tuesday dropped more than the average annual rainfall there in one night alone, settling for six to eight hours over Mecca and Thermal, desert towns 150 miles southeast of Los Angeles.

    In Thermal, the downpour flooded the Desert Mobile Home Park better known as Duroville, a community of mostly migrant workers with about 1,500 people, including 900 children, that has long been the subject of legal fights as Riverside County officials attempt to relocate residents. 

    More than a foot of water stood in the southern end of the park, knocking out power to about 800 people for much of the day. 

    "None of us had ever been through anything like this," said Tom Flynn, the court-appointed receiver for Duroville. "That much water in a dilapidated mobile home park was something to see." 

    The lack of power knocked out electric motors on both of the park's wells, leaving no fresh water until one was revived and county workers brought several tons of bottled water. 

    The park has no paved streets or drainage, and health officials were concerned about overflow from two ponds that serve as the community's sewers. 

    Between 60 and 80 people had evacuated from the park and were spending the night at a high school. "The poorest of the poor were hit the hardest," Flynn said. 

    St. Anthony's Mobile Home Park in Mecca also was affected, but fared better than Duroville. Video clips showed residents wading through knee-high water and cars creeping through flooded residential streets. 

    The storm dropped 5.51 inches of rain near Mecca and 3.23 inches of rain near Thermal, meteorologist Mark Moede said. The average annual rainfall in arid Thermal is just shy of 3 inches, he said. 

    "That's an amazing amount of rain," Moede said. "It's unusual anywhere to get a storm that sits stationary for five to eight hours."

    Arizona and Utah flooding
    On the Navajo Nation reservation in northeastern Arizona, many of Tuba City's roads were underwater and residents stuck in their homes. State Route 264, one of two main arteries in and out of town, was closed after a bridge washed out about a mile outside of the community, Tuba City Chapter Manager Benjamin Davis said.

    Flooding was reported in some homes but no residents were displaced, Davis said.

    Meanwhile, a dike that broke during heavy morning rain flooded nearly four square blocks in the southern Utah city of Santa Clara. More than 30 homes and business were evacuated after the break.

    City Manager Edward Dickie said the dike along a retention pond sent a deluge of water into downtown.

    Scott G. Winterton / The Deseret News via AP

    This neighborhood was among the areas flooded in Santa Clara, Utah on Tuesday.

    "It didn't just breach. It broke. It's gone," he said, adding that the flooding quickly receded as water drained into rivers and creeks.

    Such a wide area across the Southwest was hit, Wiltgen told NBCNews.com, because moist, unstable air interacted with a disturbance in the upper atmosphere. 

    "The disturbance helped to trigger the scattered thunderstorms that popped up across a broad swath of the Southwest," he said, "and these storms translated that very moist air into flooding downpours."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    48 comments

    Very funny comments. Here's the deal: the desert ground is so hard and dry that the rain does not soak in, it runs off. So when you get an inch of rain in less than an hour, you get flash flooding. Also, water comes rushing down the mountains surrounding the valley, adding to the mess.

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    Explore related topics: weather, flooding, las-vegas
  • 13
    Mar
    2012
    10:11am, EDT

    15 inches of rain floods Louisiana homes, roads

    A state emergency has been declared for parts of Louisiana after flash floods soaked parts of the state. WVLA-TV reports.

    By msnbc.com staff

    States of emergency were in force Tuesday in four Louisiana parishes after torrential rain left homes and roads under several feet of water. Hundreds fled their homes and dozens of motorists had to be rescued.

    Flooding closed the major highway through St. Landry Parish, and many roads across the four parishes remained closed on Tuesday.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    "In my 28 years in law enforcement I have never seen the interstate closed," St. Landry Sheriff's Capt. Jimmy Darbonne told weather.com.


    Dozens of homes in Carencro, a town in Lafayette Parish, were evacuated on Monday when some 15 inches of rain fell within five hours.

    "We had up to 7 feet of water on some streets," said Capt. Kip Judice, the local sheriff's spokesman. "We had no deaths or injuries but a lot of near calls."

    Anais Guilbeau, 93, was rescued from her flooded home by boat. "I lost everything," the Lafayette Daily Advertiser quoted her as saying. "Everything is underwater. It was bad one time," she said of her six decades of living there, "but not this bad."

    About 100 Carencro residents took refuge Monday evening at a Red Cross shelter, and several area schools were closed Tuesday.

    Carencro flood images via NBC33TV.com

    Louisiana State Police Sgt. E.J. Chesne had to rescue his own dog. "My dog was in his cage, just floating around,” Chesne told the Advertiser of his return home Monday. "All the floors are buckled in the house."

    Flooding also hit Acadia and St. Martin parishes.

    John Bruce / St. Martin Parish Sheriff's Department

    This highway intersection in St. Martin Parish, La., was among the areas cut off Monday by flooding.

    "Essentially, you saw about one quarter of a year’s worth of rainfall fall within about five hours," The Baton Rouge Advocate quoted Mike Marcotte, a National Weather Service forecaster, as saying. "I’m sure the people that were involved in this will remember and they should remember because it’s going to be something that won’t be repeated for a long time to come."

    And while 15 inches in five hours is a lot by any standard, it's still far short of any record. A foot of rain fell in 43 minutes in Holt, Mo., in 1947, according to the World Meteorological Association.

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    172 comments

    My heart goes out to those who are losing everything.

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    Explore related topics: weather, flooding, louisiana
  • 26
    Jan
    2012
    10:08am, EST

    Woman, 71, survives driving SUV into flooded road

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

    By Omar Villafranca, nbcdfw.com

    Don't call Dorothy Hoenig lucky. She considers herself blessed.

    The 71-year-old Mesquite, Texas, grandmother had her prayers answered Wednesday morning after she accidentally drove her sport utility vehicle into a flooded intersection.

    Hoenig turned off Interstate 635 onto Park Central during her morning commute. It was dark and she didn't think anything about her commute because it's the same path she's traveled for years, she said.

    But the overnight rain had turned the intersection into a small lake.

    "I didn't have time to think of anything else," Hoenig said. "Next thing I knew, I was swept out."

    Hoenig said she immediately noticed water seeping into her car. She grabbed her phone, called 911 and immediately started thinking about her grandson.

    "'God's in control' -- that's what I was thinking, sitting there in that car this morning," she said.

    More from NBC affiliate nbcdfw.com

    Hoenig, who said she can't swim and hates water, was rescued by Dallas firefighters a few minutes later.

    "I was just taking deep breathes and thanking the Lord that I had a fireman there," she said.

    But don't expect Hoenig to take a day off to count her blessings.

    She rented a pickup truck and plans to travel the same road to work on Thursday morning.

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    17 comments

    It is good she was in a SUV not a small car. Otherwise she would have drowned for sure.

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    Explore related topics: weather, flooding
  • 19
    Jan
    2012
    10:21am, EST

    Child drowns, mom presumed dead in Northwest storm

    Don Ryan / AP

    Periwinkle Creek in Albany, Ore., is searched Thursday for any signs of the car swept away overnight.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    The Pacific Northwest storm that dumped snow across Washington and rain across Oregon claimed the life of a child swept into an overflowing creek. Officials on Thursday said the infant's mother was missing and presumed dead.

    Four people -- two adults and two children -- were in a car at a grocery store parking lot in Albany, Ore., when witnesses saw the vehicle turn into the creek on Wednesday night.

    As the car sank, a man and his son, 5, were able to get out. Both were taken to a hospital, with the child reportedly in critical condition.

    The body of 20-month-old child was found later by rescue crews.

    Some witnesses said up to three adults and four children were in the vehicle, but officials on Thursday confirmed that the only other person in the vehicle was the infant's mother, 18-year-old Catherine McLaughlin.

    KPTV.com quoted one witness as saying he saw the driver turn into the creek, possibly thinking it was a road. He and his friend tried to save the people inside.

    "I did what I thought I could. I tried to open the doors. The doors were obviously locked. When he broke the window, I assumed the child in the back was old enough to get out through the window," Zach Williams said. "Apparently, it was just an infant."

    Crews worked until 11 p.m. searching for the vehicle, which is believed to have been swept farther down the creek and into an underground culvert.

    "No one can survive underwater this long," oregonlive.com quoted Albany Fire Department spokeswoman Wanda Omdahl as saying late Wednesday. "It's just so tragic."

    Divers were not expected to go in the culvert until the flooding subsides.

    Albany is 70 miles south of Portland, Ore.

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    48 comments

    The father is never going to get over this. Get off his neck. Why is everyone so quick to blame and judge? Go home and look in the mirror and go 'judge' yourself.

    Show more
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