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  • Updated
    28
    May
    2013
    7:45am, EDT

    Obama returning to Jersey Shore to check up on post-Sandy recovery

    Kena Betancur / Getty Images

    People walk along the broadwalk in Seaside Heights, New Jersey on the first weekend of New Jersey beaches re-opening to the public, Sunday.

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    President Obama travels to New Jersey on Tuesday for a progress report on the state's recovery from Superstorm Sandy that on the surface appears remarkable but which hides deep and lingering pain.

    Sandy caused about $40 billion worth of damage when it wrecked the Jersey shore in October, killing dozens of people, forcing thousands of residents to flee and destroying nearly 350,000 homes.

    For the first time since the days after Superstorm Sandy struck, President Obama is paying a visit to the Jersey Shore and will survey the recovery progress with New Jersey Governor Chris Christie. NBC's Peter Alexander reports.

    Much of the tourist-magnet shoreline itself raced back to business in time to open for the Memorial Day holiday Monday. But you don't have to go far to find long-lasting scars that will take years to heal.

    "Life for the tourists — when they come down — they're not going to notice any change from last year to this year," Michael Corbally, a member of the Point Pleasant Beach City Council, told NBC News. But "for the homeowners, it's very unfortunate."

    Homeowners say insurance money has been slow to arrive. Developers claim that remapping of flood zones threatens to slow rebuilding. And small businesses that cater to the shore's $19 billion tourist industry are struggling.

    New Jersey has 130 miles of coastline, drawing 59 million tourists a year.

    Marilyn Schlossbach, a restaurateur who runs several eateries in the area, said progress was real but slow.

    "We're not trying to build a mansion here and retire," Schlossbach told NBC News. "We're trying to get back to work."

    For Gov. Chris Christie, Obama's visit will rekindle an unlikely political bromance that struck up when Christie — a fiscally conservative Republican who's widely believed to be considering a White House campaign in 2016 — put aside political differences and praised Obama's response to the crisis in the weeks after the storm.

    Christie took flak from fellow Republicans for traveling around the state with Obama late last year.

    But, in an interview on NBC's TODAY on Friday ahead of Obama's visit, he insisted that "emergencies are a totally different thing."


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "Americans help other Americans when we're in trouble, and that's always been what this country has been about," Christie said. 

    "You can't experience it unless you're here and see for yourself, and he's the president of the United States," Christie said. "If he wants to come and see the people of New Jersey, I'm the governor and I'll be here to welcome him."

    It will be the second unusual pairing for Christie during his efforts to promote the region. Earlier his month, he was joined on the boardwalk by Britain's Prince Harry, who praised "that great American spirit" while touring the reconstructed zone.

    New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie speaks with TODAY's Matt Lauer about the Jersey shore's recovery process post-Sandy.

    Obama's visit may also give the president the opportunity for a political respite after a stormy few weeks on Capitol Hill.

    With Congress away for the Memorial Day break, the Jersey trip - and its message of recovery - is less likely to be overshadowed by discussion of the IRS controversy, the killing of four Americans at the consulate in Benghazi, Libya, and media leaks.

    On Sunday, he traveled to Oklahoma to view more weather damage - this time from the deadly tornado that killed 24 people on May 20. 

    The president has sought to portray his administration as being quick and effective at responding to natural disasters, Reuters reported, in contrast to his predecessor, George W. Bush, whose administration was criticized for its handling of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans in 2005.

    Slideshow: Recovering after Sandy

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    Residents of the Northeast are still picking up the pieces after Superstorm Sandy.

    Launch slideshow

    A White House official said Obama and Christie would view the recovery efforts from Sandy, including preparations by local businesses ahead of the important summer tourist season. 

    "The president ... will visit with families and business owners who have shown such resilience in the face of the destructive storm, highlight the extensive rebuilding efforts to date, and underscore his administration's ongoing commitment to stand with the impacted communities as the important work of recovery continues," the White House official told Reuters.

    NBC News' Alastair Jamieson and Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    2013 Atlantic hurricane season forecast to be 'above normal,' 'possibly extremely active'

    Gov. Christie boosts Jersey Shore with Memorial Day weekend road trip

    Sandy-damaged boardwalk reopens

    This story was originally published on Tue May 28, 2013 3:44 AM EDT

    274 comments

    comrade obama behind on his photo ops???

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    Explore related topics: new-jersey, barack-obama, featured, jersey-shore, sandy, updated, chris-christie, superstorm-sandy
  • 23
    Nov
    2012
    1:28am, EST

    Destroyed roller coaster could be Jersey Shore tourist attraction, mayor says

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

    By Brian Thompson, NBCNewYork.com

    The roller coaster that was swept right-side up into the Atlantic Ocean as Hurricane Sandy slammed the Jersey Shore may not be torn down, according to Seaside Heights Mayor Bill Akers. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The picture of the ride, which looks more like a water slide these days, has become an iconic image of the damage Sandy  wreaked up and down the coast just over three weeks ago. 

    But Mayor Akers, in an exclusive interview with NBC 4 New York, said he is working with the Coast Guard to see if it is stable enough to leave it alone.  

    If it is, Akers said it would make "a great tourist attraction."


    Meanwhile, demolition crews have already finished removing all of the damaged boardwalk that was the heart and soul of this seaside resort.

    Businessmen like Mike Mergott of Mad Mike's Amusements said he is rebuilding because he is "one hundred per cent sure" families want to come back.

    And Jim Loundy, who owned several buildings wiped away by the surge is confident he won't see another storm like this for "another fifty or sixty years."

    Mayor Akers said construction on a new boardwalk should begin in January, and be ready by Memorial Day. 

    Slideshow:

    Julio Cortez / AP file

    A rollercoaster that once sat on a pier in Seaside Heights, N.J., rests in the ocean after the pier was washed away by Superstorm Sandy,Oct. 31, 2012.

    Launch slideshow

     

    155 comments

    To leave the thing there would be an idiotic move. Not only would it become a rusted out eyesore in very short order, it would turn into a major hazard. Too many people would be tempted to climb on and pay around the thing.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-jersey, jersey-shore, nbcnewyork, superstorm, hurricane-sandy
  • 30
    Oct
    2012
    6:02pm, EDT

    Sandy hammers Jersey Shore, levels homes, shreds boardwalks

    NBC's Brian Williams speaks with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who describes the iconic places on the Jersey Shore that have been wiped out after Sandy, such the boardwalk in Belmar. All that remains is water, sand and debris. Christie said he's committed to rebuilding with the help of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

    An ariel shot reveals damage in New Jersey Shore from Superstorm Sandy on Tuesday.

    By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The New Jersey Shore, the East Coast’s summer playground, famous for its amusement parks, fine white sand beaches, family vacation cottages and even a reality TV show, could be among areas hardest hit by Superstorm Sandy.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    On Tuesday, stark images of leveled homes, shredded boardwalks, boats tossed blocks inland and acres of sand hurled hundreds of yards from the coast began to emerge.

    Aerial video on Thursday from state police via NBC’s News10 in Philadelphia showed homes splintered and others surrounded by floodwaters.

     


    In footage from a New Jersey National Guard helicopter, beach homes along Seaside Heights were strewn at odd angles off their foundations, debris was on fire and roads were inundated with sand.

    One reader commented on Facebook that it looked like Normandy Beach, site of the allied forces landing in France during World War II.

    According to a media pool reporter who accompanied Coast Guard Rear Adm. Steven H. Ratti in a flyover on Tuesday the destruction is extensive. Ratti said he was surprised at the number of washed-out bridges and new inlets carved through New Jersey's barrier Islands. Ratti also noted how unusual it is to see those beach towns so empty.

    "Normally you see folks on the beach, cars, but saw little of that today," Ratti said.

    In an appearance on NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams Tuesday evening, Gov. Chris Christie called the damage "unthinkable."

    Watch aerials from the New Jersey State Police of the devastation from Sandy along the New Jersey Shore. Raw video.

    "I flew over the Seaside Heights boardwalk today. The roller coaster, the log flume ride are in the ocean," Christie told Williams. "The boardwalk in front of Lucky Leos is gone. It’s literally gone. The big sausage and pepper stand in the middle is gone."

    Christie said that kind of damage could be seen up and down the Jersey Shore.

    "All you see is water and sand and debris where the boardwalk used to be," Christie said of Belmar.

    "I’m committed to rebuilding," Christie said. "We’re going to do it. It’s not only the heart of our economy, it’s the soul of New Jersey. The Jersey Shore is the soul of New Jersey."

    A dune constructed to protect Point Pleasant Beach was blown away by the storm surge, sending sand far inland, NBC’s Ron Mott reported.

    Reporting from Point Pleasant Beach, New Jersey, NBC's Ron Allen reports that the sand dunes designed to help protect the town were spread far and wide once floodwaters hit.

    The deadly storm, which hit the Atlantic City dead on and ripped up sections of its famous boardwalk, left more than 2 million people in the state without power and submerged portions of some shore towns, NBC10 in Philadelphia reported.

    Related: Superstorm Sandy leaves surreal scenes in its wake

    Atlantic City was cut off from the mainland by the storm surge along with other barrier islands, stranding residents who ignored warnings to evacuate. The city’s response sparked a feud between the mayor and governor.

    A USA Today reporter who visited Fork River spoke to a Beach Haven resident, Erik Zak, who said much of the town was destroyed.

    "There are boats on top of decks, garages floated into the bay," he said. "We saw houses on top of boats."

    President Barack Obama has declared New Jersey a disaster area, clearing the way for federal disaster assistance to help start cleanup.

    On Wednesday, Obama will join Christie in New Jersey for a tour of storm damage and a talk with residents who are recovering from the storm. He will also talk to first responders, according to a White House statement.

    Obama called the storm “heartbreaking for the nation.”

    Slideshow: Sandy slams into East Coast

    Andrew Burton / Getty Images

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

    Launch slideshow

    More content from NBCNews.com:

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    55 comments

    Frankly the level of damage in New Jersey is completely insane. Christie must be thanking God that FEMA is around and that Romney is not President right now. If Romney was President NJ would be on it's own to figure out how to pay for rebuilding its coastal cities and beaches.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-jersey, atlantic-city, barack-obama, featured, jersey-shore, sandy, chris-christie, superstorm, superstorm-sandy
  • 20
    Oct
    2012
    2:21pm, EDT

    Mystery ground shaking rattles South Jersey

    By NBC News

    USGS

    USGS Intensity Map of New Jersey shaking

    South New Jersey residents felt the ground shaking Saturday morning, but no earthquakes or military training exercises were reported in the region.

    The U.S. Geological Survey suggested a possible sonic boom was the cause.

    "I'm in LEH [Little Egg Harbor] and my basement door shook violently for 15 sec or so long enough to creep me out. Sounded like someone was trying to get out," posted a person identified as Dana Re on the Jersey Shore Hurricane News Facebook page.

     
     
     


    Another comment, posted by a person identified as John Tefankjian, said he felt his Brigantine house shake, but differently from when fighter jets go by in training.

    See the NBCPhiladelphia.com report

    "There currently is no training of any type that would have resulted in today's incident," Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst spokesman Pascual Flores told NBC News on Saturday.

    The New Jersey National Guard last weekend conducted artillery-fire training that it told the public about in advance.

    NBCPhiladelphia.com reported that residents in Atlantic, Cape May, Ocean, Salem and Camden County claimed they felt the ground shake.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    Comments on the shaking were also posted on independent Earthquake-Report.com.

    "Felt like a rumble, everyone ran outside, we all noticed on our street," said one from Ocean City.

    "Whole house started shaking, outside sounded like a bomb with slight shaking," said one from Little Egg Harbor.

    NBC News' Jim Gold and NBCPhiladelphia's Lauren DiSanto contributed to this story.

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    260 comments

    Governor Christie fell out of his bed??????

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    Explore related topics: earthquake, new-jersey, ground, jersey-shore, south-jersey, shaking, nbcphiladelphia
  • 18
    Jul
    2012
    9:13am, EDT

    New Jersey boy dies after sand tunnel collapses at the beach

    By NBCNewYork.com
    UPDATED, 1 a.m. ET: Police say a boy who was rushed to the hospital Tuesday after a sand tunnel collapsed over him at a beach in Long Branch, N.J., has died.

    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The 12-year-old, who has not been identified, was not breathing when he was pulled out of the sand late Tuesday afternoon, officials said. Lifeguards administered CPR on him, and he was taken to Monmouth Medical Center where he was placed in pediatric intensive care unit.

    For more visit NBCNewYork.com.


    Witnesses at the beach said blood was coming out of the boy's nose when lifeguards were working on him. 

    Someone screamed for help from lifeguards, who were just 15 feet away, said Roebuck. The boy was pulled out, and lifeguards performed CPR on him as they waited for paramedics.

    A beachgoer from Staten Island, N.Y., said the boy wasn't moving.

    "They were pumping him, pressing on his stomach, trying to bring him back," she said. "They kept trying to revive him, pressing, pressing. There was blood coming out of his nose... He didn't move." 

    Sources said the tunnel was deep, and the weight of all the sand on the boy's chest made it impossible for him to breathe.

    The boy was rushed to Monmouth Medical Center, where he was taken to the pediatric intensive care unit. 

    The boy is from Oakhurst, sources said, but his name is being withheld.

    Authorities said a fire truck responding to the scene hit a man holding his infant son. The truck hit the pair as it pulled into Ocean Place near the beach, knocking them both to the ground. 

    Both were taken to the Jersey Shore Medical Center. The father suffered some broken limbs. The baby was injured but not severely. 

    The firefighter driving the truck was working his last shift before his retirement, officials said.

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    465 comments

    Holy crap. This story is depressing. The last shift before the firefighter's retirement? What a terrible way to end his career.

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    Explore related topics: rescue, boy, new-jersey, jersey, jersey-shore, sand
  • 10
    Jul
    2012
    9:17am, EDT

    Afraid of lightning strike, New Jersey teen jumps from chairlift

    A teen girl suffered only minor injuries after she chose to leap 35 feet from a halted ride in Seaside Heights, N.J., fearing she would be struck by lightning as a storm approached. The incident was caught on camera and TODAY's Natalie Morales has the details.

    By NBCNewYork.com

    A New Jersey teenager said Monday she "freaked out" when her chairlift ride high above a beach stopped as a thunderstorm approached — and that's why she jumped.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Melanie Rossomando of Springfield said she decided to jump rather than risk being hit by lightning as she celebrated her 17th birthday Saturday at the Casino Pier amusement park.

    A video posted to YouTube shows the girl kicking off her shoes and jumping off the Sky Ride as dark clouds and heavy winds roll in. It doesn't, however, show her landing on the beach.


    For more visit NBCNewYork.com.

    "We got freaked out because the storm just came in so fast," said Rossomando. "It was pitch dark above us and the lightning was right there."

    Rossomando said she and her friend were three chairs away from the ride exit when the electricity went out and the ride stopped.

    "We freaked out," she said. "My friend looked at me and she was like, 'We have to jump.' And I'm like, 'Yeah, yeah. We're jumping. That's it, I'm not staying on here. It's a metal death trap.'"

    "We threw all our stuff down, and I jumped but she didn't," said Rossomando.

    The teen said she preferred getting hurt by jumping the 35 feet from the chair than risking getting electrocuted.

    "Broken leg, broken arm, whatever, that completely beats getting struck by lightning," she said. "And I just knew the way to fall, I went straight and cradled myself to the side."

    The girl's father said he received a call from an off-duty EMT soon after she jumped. The EMT had witnessed the leap, and ran to stay with her until an ambulance arrived.

    When Pete Rossomando went to the boardwalk to locate his daughter and her friend -- who was able to disembark after emergency responders arrived and helped turn the power back on with a generator -- he noted just how high the lift was.

    "I said, 'I'm glad I didn't see that,'" he said. "We were walking back to the car, and we started laughing: 'Wouldn't it be funny if it was on YouTube? Ha ha.' And it was."

    He said he supported his daughter's "gut instinct," noting the death of a woman who was struck by lightning on the Jersey Shore the same day.

    "It was self-preservation," he said.

    A visit to the doctor confirmed the teen wasn't too badly hurt.

    "The doctor said because she plays sports and had been working out and was getting ready for the upcoming soccer season, that's probably what saved her from getting hurt worse," said Rossomando. "And the fact that she had the presence of mind not to land on her legs, to land on her side."

    The operators of the Casino Pier said the chair ride was in standby mode and no new passengers were being allowed on when the power went out. They said staff, following emergency procedures, evacuated the remaining riders and that they didn't know a passenger had jumped off until they saw the video Sunday.

    Rossomando doesn't blame the ride operators for not being able to respond to the storm earlier.

    "It was a beautiful day, and there was no sign of a storm coming," she said. "And the conductors aren't going to check 24/7 if there's a storm coming on."

    The chairlift takes riders above the beach and boardwalk, offering cool ocean breezes and views of MTV's "Jersey Shore" house, among other things.

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    181 comments

    Too bad 'Snookie' & the other overpaid, talentless band of losers wasn't there for her to land on!

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  • 12
    Mar
    2012
    9:48pm, EDT

    2-year-old girl found dead in New Jersey septic tank

    NBCPhiladelphia.com

    A 2-year-old girl was found dead in a septic tank on Monday night. Police say she fell in after walking away from her home.

    By NBCPhiladelphia.com and msnbc.com staff

    Following an intense, three-hour search, searchers found a 2-year-old girl dead in a septic tank near her home close to the Jersey Shore in New Jersey, police reported. They said she had walked away from her home and fell inside the septic system.

    Police said they were contacted by the child's mother after she couldn't find her daughter. When police arrived, they found a 3-foot-wide hole in the ground above the septic tank. They called the public works department to pump out the water from the tank; two hours later, the water level dropped and they found the child's body.

    Investigators believe the girl had been playing in the yard with her four siblings before wandering off.

    The search included Lakewood police and Ocean County sheriff’s deputies. The New Jersey State Police dispatched a helicopter, the Star-Ledger reported.  

    Details are still emerging and the girl’s name has not been released.

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    104 comments

    Who leaves a septic tank open?

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