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  • 24
    Jan
    2013
    4:48am, EST

    FEMA leaves many Sandy victims languishing

    David Friedman / NBC News file

    Joe Casale, far right, watches workers remove debris from his flooded home in Breezy Point, N.Y., on Nov. 1.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    BREEZY POINT, N.Y. -- A first-of-its-kind home repair program pioneered by the federal government and local agencies has made thousands of New York City homes livable since Hurricane Sandy, but thousands of other homeowners are still waiting for help, and growing more frustrated with each passing day.

    “Nobody communicates anything to you,” said Joe Casale, a 52-year-old service engineer who lives in Breezy Point with his wife, Katie, and three sons. “I have to keep on calling up and busting people’s chops to find out what’s going on. It’s ridiculous. … It’s not rapid for one. We started up on Nov. 15 and they’re just getting around to us now. … They held us back a good month I would say.”


    Despite assessments like Casale's, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, widely vilified for its response after Hurricane Katrina in 2005, has mostly avoided a similar public relations disaster in the wake of Sandy. FEMA officials say that’s at least partly due to the Rapid Repairs program, aimed at getting victims back home quickly so they can focus on rebuilding.

    The program, which provides free utility repairs and replacement equipment like water heaters and boilers to qualified homeowners, has restored services to more than 11,800 residences in New York City, officials say. Work is under way on about 1,900 more dwellings.

    Two neighboring New York counties and two New Jersey communities are also running the same program, which they call STEP (Sheltering and Temporary Essential Power).

    While the idea of Rapid Repairs initially received positive reviews, critics say the execution has been far from flawless. Nearly three months after the Oct. 29 storm, some 7,000 New York City households have not yet received help through the program.

    That assessment is echoed by those still waiting, who tell stories of canceled or missed appointments, improperly installed equipment and a disorganized bureaucracy where their complaints fall on deaf ears. 

    Barry Fischer, a 45-year-old electrician who also lives in this coastal New York City enclave with his wife, Christina, and their five children, called the program “nonexistent,” noting they had been waiting since mid-November for electrical work and a hot water heater. 

    His wife, a 35-year-old college professor, said she had been going to the Rapid Repairs’ offices every day to find out when the workers would come to her home. She also made dozens of calls, chased contractors’ trucks through her neighborhood on foot and in her car, and one time even tried to cut them off and block them in with her vehicle in order to force a conversation. 

    The final straw came last week, when she met a Rapid Repairs’ worker looking for a nearby home that is only occupied in the summer.

    “I was really freaking out,” she said. “… And that’s terrible. Why should somebody be really that crazy in order to get assistance?”

    David Friedman / NBC News

    Christina Fischer plays with her disabled daughter Georgia, 4, and son Timothy, 7, who is severely hearing impaired, after school on Jan. 14 in Rockaway Beach, N.Y.

    Officials overseeing the program acknowledge there have been missteps and say they understand the frustration building among those who still don’t have basic utilities. But they defend the premise of Rapid Repairs -- that residents can rebuild their homes much more quickly when they are living in them -- and vow to learn from the mistakes, some of which resulted from their efforts to act decisively.

    The program was launched two weeks after the storm struck, leaving about 20,000 residential buildings in the city with some damage or disruption to their utilities.

    “We thought that with some basic repair work … that would enable families to basically shelter in place, be in their homes, be safe and then begin the real work of rebuilding and doing it in their communities not away from (them),” Cas Holloway, deputy mayor for operations, told NBC News. “We wanted to move fast.”

    For many Sandy victims, that’s what happened.

    Nine general contractors hired by the city, who in turn have more than 100 subcontractors working with them, had completed repairs on more than 6,800 buildings, comprising 11,800 residential units, as of Jan. 21, according to the mayor’s Office of Housing Recovery. Crews had started work on about 1,900 others.

    Slideshow: Recovering after Sandy

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

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

    Launch slideshow

    About 3,000 other households opted out of the program for various reasons, including not wanting to wait for repairs, Holloway said, leaving fewer than 7,000 residences still waiting.

    Homeowners had from Nov. 13 through Jan. 14 to sign up for the pilot program. The city will eventually submit the bill to FEMA, which preliminarily authorized spending of up to $500 million and is expected to reimburse between 80 percent and 90 percent of the cost.

    The cost for each household is supposed to be about $10,000, though it could go higher depending on the work required, said Michael Byrne, the senior FEMA official in New York state for the Sandy response and recovery.

    FEMA: What the program covers

    FEMA said it no longer uses the ubiquitous travel trailers that were deployed to temporarily house thousands of Katrina victims, and Holloway and Byrne said mobile homes weren’t viable in the densely-populated urban environment of New York City. They also carry a hefty price tag of $250,000, and take months to set up, they said.

    Those already helped by the program said they're happy with the results.

    Fran McCabe, who responded to an NBC News inquiry about the program on Facebook, wrote: “Waited for weeks but finally got a hot water heater and then a few weeks later got a new furnace. Work crews were WONDERFUL. … We're very grateful to the city for this program. It would have been much faster to do the repairs privately but the cost was a hardship for us at this time.”

    But for families like the Fischers, whose children include a 7-year-old son who is severely hearing impaired and a 4-year-old daughter with Charcot Marie Tooth Disease, a common nerve disorder that can make it hard to walk, and apraxia, a speech disorder, the intended jumpstart has proven to be a roadblock.

    They still don’t have central heat, hot water or working toilets in their two-story home, which forced them to sign a one-year rental agreement on a house in Jackson Heights in northern Queens. They’ve had to dip into Barry’s 401(k) savings, since the FEMA rental aid doesn’t cover their entire rent, and they have to pay their mortgage and co-op fees on a home they can’t live in. Adding to the financial strain: Their insurance will cover just one-third of the $300,000 cost to rebuild. 

    'Why ... all this insanity?'
    While the city has an “active high priority list” for residents in the greatest need of shelter, including the elderly and disabled, and Christina had informed the program many times about her disabled children, she found out last week that they weren’t on it.

    Finally, a Rapid Repairs’ plumber showed up with a new boiler last Friday, Christina Fischer said. In the days since, electricians have done most of the wiring though there is still no heating system for the first floor.

    “I don’t understand why a family with disabled children would have had to go through all this insanity in order to get this done when this was the whole kind of point of the program … to help the people who needed it most from the get-go,” she said. “It came to me going there every day, me becoming very threatening for it to get done, and I think that’s really, really unfortunate.”

    It's been two and a half months since Superstorm Sandy barreled through New Jersey and New York, but people are still desperately awaiting aid. NBC's Katy Tur reports.

    Holloway, the deputy mayor of operations, and Byrne, of FEMA, acknowledge that there were challenges getting the pilot program up and running, which led to some delays.

    Holloway said they switched from a “first-in, first-out” service model to a block-by-block method in order to avoid “wasting half a shift in transport.” They also had to order equipment and set up staging areas for it that were easy for contractors to access.

    “There have been a lot of challenges setting this up,” he said, noting it was “unfortunate” some of the people who signed up early “probably have now had to wait longer than really they expected to and more than we would have liked them to.”

    Holloway said the work has accelerated as the process has improved, noting that for a recent three-week period crews had worked on 100 homes a day on average. He said the program also is less expensive per household than mobile homes, though he could not say how much money the overall city bill will be.

    Despite the problems, Byrne and Holloway both say they believe it could become a model for disaster response.

    “I think it will end up being pretty remarkable that families are back in much faster than they might have been under a different model where you might … go rent a place for a year and then come back,” Holloway said. “… That is a terrible option for a homeowner and a family, and it’s terrible for a neighborhood.”

    David Abramson, deputy director of Columbia University’s National Center for Disaster Preparedness, said he was initially impressed with the Rapid Repairs’ concept because it addressed some key barriers facing communities when they begin the recovery process, such as having credentialed and trusted contractors.

    But he said execution of the program has been spotty.

    “I certainly don’t want to throw them under the bus so quickly because they’re having a lot of hiccups in the initial phase,” he said, “(but) they’re clearly having major issues.”  

    “I think it falls in the category of good plan, poor implementation,” he added.  

    Lucas Jackson / Reuters

    Cranes work to remove several feet of sand deposited on Ocean Avenue by Hurricane Sandy in Sea Bright, N.J., on Oct. 31.

    In the suburban New York City counties of Suffolk and Nassau, where the STEP program was announced in mid-November, more than 540 homes had been repaired by Jan. 15, out of some 2,350 households that signed up, according to FEMA.

    The STEP program also is operating in two coastal New Jersey communities: Sea Bright, where 115 property owners have signed up, and in Ocean City, where enrollment data was not available.

    Sea Bright Mayor Dina Long told NBC News work there is expected to begin in mid-March. A town meeting last week addressed STEP, and she said people were "grateful (for the program), they want to come home." Very few residents have insurance settlements, or they've come in much lower than their losses, leaving many of them in limbo.

    Retired grandparents Jeanne and Burt Metz lost their home when Superstorm Sandy hit Breezy Point, New York. A volunteer organization told the couple that their floors and walls would be rebuilt – but little did the Metz family know that hundreds of people were working to resurrect their entire house. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports.

    “Sandy devastated this little town,” she said. “We lost every business, 75 percent of our homes are not habitable. It’s a ghost town. ... Almost three months later, we are not getting very far. And so something like STEP at least gives us a chance to start moving back to the recovery.”

    But some of those in New York City who are just beginning to receive help from Rapid Repairs said they wish they had never waited on it.

    Casale, the Breezy Point engineer, had to take a loan from his brother-in-law to help cover repairs he and his wife started on their own.

    They’ve done most of the electrical work, but with no heat and water, paint wouldn't dry and they couldn’t get someone to work on their kitchen due to the cold. 

    They finally received a hot water heater and a boiler on Jan. 11, but after the installation was finished the boiler began leaking and shorted out the electronic controls on Monday. They’re now waiting for a replacement part to arrive. 

    “It was one big fiasco after another,” Katie Casale, 49, a personal assistant at an insurance company, said Tuesday. 

    On top of that, Joe Casale found out from Rapid Repairs on Monday that the contractor had already submitted a bill saying the work was complete.

    “I’m paying rent and I’m paying a mortgage for three months, so how rapid is rapid?” he said. “It’s not a rapid repair. … We wanted to get back in here.”

    Like the Casales, Christina Fischer said her family wishes they hadn't had to rely on the program. 

    “Very few of us would have waited for Rapid Repairs if we all had the money to do this, but we don’t,” she said. The program is “a great idea … but winter’s upon us and it’s not done.”  

    Related:

    Superstorm Sandy: Residents consider future as demolitions begin in Breezy Point

    Sandy-struck Breezy Point facing 'greatest historical challenge'

    Sandy victims on the move, but temporary housing 'will never be ... home'

    Full coverage of Sandy's aftermath from NBC News

    450 comments

    foolish is the man who builds upon the sand.. Hello is it just me or maybe people should not build along rivers, oceans, or other bodies of water that have a tendany to FLOOD.. You should carry flood/hurricain insurance, or better yet live inland a bit.. Why do Americans think that they deserve a ba …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new, hurricane, fema, city, michael, jersey, holloway, step, repairs, flooded, york, 29, featured, byrne, sea, sandy, bright, cas, rapid, oct, breezy-point, superstorm
  • 9
    Nov
    2012
    7:35pm, EST

    FEMA-funded rapid reconstruction program to begin in NYC, mayor says

    David Friedman / NBC News

    City sanitation workers pick up debris from Superstorm Sandy outside the Breezy Point community polling place at St. Genevieve Church on Tuesday, Nov. 6, in Breezy Point, N.Y.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    NEW YORK – The city is embarking on an unprecedented reconstruction program to swiftly repair homes damaged by Superstorm Sandy, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Friday. The program will be mostly paid for by the federal government and aims to get some people home early next week, he said.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    The program, called New York City Rapid Repair, will deploy general contractors who will oversee the work in the hard-hit areas. Those contractors will manage electricians, plumbers, carpenters and others to complete the repairs, Bloomberg said. The Federal Emergency Management Agency is supporting the project and will pay for most if not all of it, he added.

    “For a homeowner to go off on their own and find somebody who was available and willing to show up is a daunting task,” he said at a news conference. “We’re changing the game. Today, we’re launching a program that will start returning people to their homes as early as next week. … Its goal is to get as many New Yorkers as possible back in their homes by the end of the year.”


    Some 90,000 households in New York City and Long Island remained without power Friday. Some homes need simple repairs to get up and running, while others will need major work.

    The program will begin with the easiest houses to fix, with those that have received a green card -- indicating they are sound -- from the buildings department, Bloomberg said. The buildings department has already examined some 80,000 homes.

    To register, people must either visit one of the city’s restoration centers, call the information line (311) or sign up online. They must call FEMA to get an identification number. Bloomberg said. The first wave of applicants must have received a green card and be on a street where power has been restored.

    Signup begins Tuesday. Work will start soon afterward.

    Bloomberg said the program, which is optional, was unprecedented and “will save the city, state and federal government a lot of money and that’s because contractors will be able to work on multiple buildings at once and not just one house at a time.”

    Contractors will work over the weekend with the buildings department to identify the homes that will be in the first wave of repairs.

    The program “will go a long ways in our recovery, but I will say it won’t fix everything,” Bloomberg said. “In the hardest hit places like Breezy Point, homes were completely destroyed and some of the buildings that are standing will need major structural work before they can be lived in again. For those families, we’re working on housing options that we’ll have more to say about next week.”

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    80 comments

    When this rebuilding team finishes rebuilding NY, please head for New Orleans they have been waiting 10 years for a little help.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new, fema, mayor, homes, city, power, michael, bloomberg, electricity, flooded, york, sandy, superstorm
  • 6
    Sep
    2012
    8:45am, EDT

    Michael becomes year's first Category 3 Atlantic hurricane before weakening

    NASA via AFP

    A satellite-based image shows Hurricane Michael, right, and Hurricane Leslie, center, churning in the Atlantic Ocean on Thursday.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    Updated at 5 p.m. ET -- Hurricane Michael became the first major Atlantic storm of 2012 on Thursday, but by late afternoon had weakened from Category 3 to Category 2. Michael was not expected to make landfall, but Hurricane Leslie was already creating waves in Bermuda.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Michael became a hurricane overnight and quickly grew to Category 3 strength with maximum sustained winds near 115 mph Thursday morning. By late afternoon, the winds had weakened to 110 mph, the National Hurricane Center stated, and further weakening was expected.

    No coastal watches or warnings were in effect.

    The seventh hurricane of the 2012 Atlantic season, Michael was expected to turn north-northwest with some gradual weakening possible by Friday.

    Michael is "well removed from any land interests" and is "not a wave generator for the East Coast," Jonathan Erdman, a meteorologist for The Weather Channel, told NBC News.


    Meanwhile, Leslie was basically stalled Thursday afternoon but still expected to pass near Bermuda on Sunday. 

    Locals on Thursday were already moving boats out of the water.

    "We still expect tropical storm force winds across the region on Saturday afternoon and storm force winds with hurricane force gusts (on Sunday) as the storm moves north and east," Jeff Torgerson of the Bermuda Weather Service told the Bermuda Sun.

    "We are still expecting a significant storm," he added, "it’s best to hope for the best and prepare for the worst."

    Storm Tracker: Detailed stats on NBCNews.com

    A Category 1 hurricane, Leslie had maximum sustained winds of 75 mph, just a mile above hurricane status, and was about 430 miles south-southeast of Bermuda.

    Leslie is expected to gradually strengthen over the next 48 hours and could become a Category 2 hurricane.

    Current storm projections show Leslie tracking off the Eastern Seaboard to south of Nova Scotia, Canada, but not making landfall, Erdman said.

    "Leslie will continue to be a generator of waves along the East Coast, with a rip current threat persisting through Saturday from Florida to New England," Erdman said.

    Swells generated by Leslie will also impact Bermuda, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands "for the next few days," the hurricane center stated.

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    42 comments

    I understand Michael is the first cat 3 storm this year but I have one other storm question. If the depression in the gulf which they say is remmants of Isaac becomes a tropical storm it will be renamed Nadine. Does that mean Isaac was a transexual? Just a thought!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: hurricane, weather, michael, atlantic, leslie, category-3-storm
  • 5
    Sep
    2012
    3:50pm, EDT

    Leslie churns in Atlantic, becomes sixth hurricane of season

    Tropical Storm Leslie gained steam over the Atlantic Ocean and was upgraded to a Category 1 hurricane — the sixth Atlantic hurricane of the season — the National Hurricane Center said Wednesday. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Tropical Storm Leslie gained steam over the Atlantic Ocean and was upgraded to a Category 1 hurricane — the sixth Atlantic hurricane of the season — the National Hurricane Center said Wednesday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “Maximum sustained winds are now 75 mph” with even higher gusts,  the NHC said in an alert. 

    Leslie was about 465 miles southeast of Bermuda on Wednesday morning and was moving north at about 2 mph. "(Its) closest pass to Bermuda would be overnight Saturday night into early Sunday," said Jonathan Erdman, a meteorologist for The Weather Channel.


    Current storm projections show Leslie tracking off the Eastern Seaboard to south of Nova Scotia, Canada, but not making landfall. "Leslie will continue to be a generator of waves along the East Coast, with a rip current threat persisting through Saturday from Florida to New England," Erdman said.

    Leslie is expected to grow into a Category 2 hurricane by Saturday.

    Related: Click here to see our storm tracker

    Tropical Storm Michael, meanwhile, continues to churn farther east in the Atlantic. Storm projections show Michael growing into a Category 1 hurricane, perhaps by Wednesday evening, but it is not a threat to land. Michael is "well removed from any land interests," Erdman said, and is "not a wave generator for the East Coast."

    The effects of Isaac, the storm that made landfall in Louisiana late last week as a hurricane, are still affecting parts of the United States.

    U.S. regulators said about 50 percent of daily oil production and more than a quarter of daily natural gas output in the Gulf remains shut, Reuters reported.

    Meanwhile, tar has washed ashore on some Louisiana beaches from Gulf waters churned by Isaac, according to The Associated Press.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    7 comments

    If NOAA is so smart, how come they didn't predict the storms that blew the lights out for the better part of a week in Ohio, Virginia, and West Virginia? We have yet to see the massive storms that were predicted to occur because of Global Warming. Even Isaac wasn't that massive.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: hurricane, weather, michael, isaac, featured, atlantic, leslie
  • 6
    Aug
    2012
    2:48pm, EDT

    Experts: Alleged temple gunman Wade Michael Page led neo-Nazi band, had deep extremist ties

    While investigators continue to search for a motive in the deadly shooting at a Sikh temple in Wis., they say alleged gunman Wade Michael Page was active in the white supremacist scene for at least 12 years, playing in two bands associated with racist skinheads.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The gunman who allegedly attacked a Sikh temple in southern Wisconsin, killing six people and wounding four, was a “white supremacist skinhead” and “frustrated neo-Nazi” who led a white power punk and metal band, groups that track extremism said Monday.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    Wade Michael Page, 40, was the founder of End Apathy, according to Mark Potok, a senior fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center. In a blog post about Page, Potok cited an April 2010 interview that the alleged gunman gave to the “Uprise Direct” music website about the band’s work.


    MySpace, End Apathy

    A photo of Wade Michael Page, 40, who is accused of killing six people and wounding four others at a Sikh temple in Oak Creek, Wis.

    Page said his band, which formed in 2005, “was based on trying to figure out what it would take to actually accomplish positive results in society and what is holding us back. A lot of what I realized at the time was that if we could figure out how to end people’s apathetic ways it would be the start towards moving forward. Of course after that it requires discipline, strict discipline to stay the course in our sick society.

    “So, in a sense it was view of psychology and sociology. But I didn't want to just point the finger at what other people should do, but also I was willing to point out some of my faults on how I was holding myself back. And that is how I wrote the song ‘Self Destruct,’’ he said.

    Mark Pitcavage, director of investigative research for the Anti-Defamation League, said Page was a mem­ber of the Ham­mer­skins, "one of the oldest and largest hardcore racist skinhead groups," and iden­ti­fied him­self as a North­ern Ham­mer­skin, part of the group’s upper Mid­west branch. 

    End Apa­thy had been a fea­tured band in recent years at many Hammerskin-organized white power music con­certs, such as the August 2010 “Meet  & Greet BBQ & Bands” in North Car­olina, the Ham­mer­skins’ St. Patty’s Day Show in March 2011 in Orlando, Fla., and Ham­mer­fest 2011 last Octo­ber in Orlando, Pitcavage noted in a blog post, in which he described Page as a "white supremacist skinhead."

    Researchers say the alleged gunman in the Wisconsin Sikh temple was deeply involved in hate group subculture. The Army veteran, who was discharged for a drinking problem, played in two bands associated with racist skinheads. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    “We had identified Page several years ago as someone who was prominent in the white-power music scene,” he told NBC News. He said Page also used a pseudonym, “Jack Boot,” an apparent reference to the high military boots worn by members of dictatorial regimes such as Nazi Germany.

    The white-power music scene is one of the main things that the Hammerskins do in the United States and is a “fairly important part of the white supremacist subculture" in the country, said Pitcavage. Because of Page's role in that music scene, he had already become linked with the Hammerskins through his involvement in bands tied to the group and his performances at their events.

    Page became a “fully patched” member of the Hammerskins by late 2011 after going through an apprenticeship period. He had one of their tattoos on his right arm -- a sort of cogwheel with the numbers 838 inside it (838 is an alpha-numeric code that means “hail crossed hammers,” a reference to their logo of two-crossed hammers that was taken from Pink Floyd’s “The Wall”), Pitcavage said. The tattoo also had the group’s colors of red, black and yellow.

    A photo of Page also showed that he had a Celtic Cross tattoo with the number 14 in it, which is a “major white supremacist symbol,” Pitcavage said.

    The Hammerskins emerged in Texas in the mid-to-late 1980s and spread across the country. They are loosely organized, not hierarchical and tend to group themselves regionally.

    “It has had a strong association with violence over the past several decades,” Pitcavage said, noting that it was not surprising that the alleged gunman “was a white supremacist because white supremacist shooting sprees tend to be directed at minorities.”

    FBI probes background of Sikh temple shooting suspect
    Sikhs reel after senseless attack: 'We're not Taliban'

    Sikhs at the Golden Temple, their holiest shrine

    Page said in the “Uprise” interview that his music was a mix of '80s punk, metal and Oi!, a subgenre of punk.

    “The topics vary from sociological issues, religion, and how the value of human life has been degraded by being submissive to tyranny and hypocrisy that we are subjugated to,” he said in the interview.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Page was a “frustrated neo-Nazi who had been the leader of a racist white-power band,” wrote Potok, of the Southern Poverty Law Center. “In 2000, the Southern Poverty Law Center has found that Page also attempted to purchase goods from the neo-Nazi National Alliance, then America's most important hate group.”

    The FBI was “looking at ties to white supremacist groups” in the case, said Teresa Carlson, FBI special agent in charge in Milwaukee. They were also investigating the attack as possible domestic terrorism, which she noted meant use of force or violence for social or political gain. The FBI did not have an active investigation on Page before Sunday.

    Page, an Army veteran who served from 1992 to 1998 but was never deployed, said in the “Uprise” interview that he was from Colorado and that in 2000 he “wanted to basically start over.”

    “So, I sold everything I owned except for my motorcycle and what I could fit into a backpack and went on cross country trip visiting friends and attending festivals and shows. I went to the Hammerfest 2000 in Georgia, over to North Carolina, up to Ohio, down to West Virginia, and out to California… .”

    Since 2009, the United States has been in the middle of a “huge resurgence” of right-wing extremism largely split into two spheres: an anti-government extremist one, such as the militia movement, and white supremacists, Pitcavage said. The number of militia groups has quintupled in the past three years and there have been many arrests of white supremacists over the same time for acts of violence, he said.

    The election of a non-white president and the struggling economy were the triggers, Pitcavage said.

    “It’s just a huge number of incidents from the extreme right since 2009. It’s the biggest resurgence of right-wing extremist activity since the mid-1990s and the Oklahoma City bombing (in 1995), and it’s causing problems all around the country,” he added.

    On End Apathy's Myspace page, the group listed its location as Nashville, N.C., and said they had finished recording for an upcoming release on Label 56, which the ADL described as a Maryland-based company that distributes racist skinhead music, videos and merchandise. The last login for the page was dated Feb. 21, 2012.

    Label 56 issued a statement Monday saying that all images and products related to the group had been removed from their website.

    “We do not wish to profit from this tragedy financially or with publicity,” said the label. “In closing please do not take what Wade did as honorable or respectable and please do not think we are all like that.”

    Label 56 officials did not respond to an email and phone call seeking comment.

     

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    1477 comments

    What the hell is happening ? The ALLEGED gunman? He is NOT alleged... he is actual and he is dead.

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    Explore related topics: white, shooting, wisconsin, michael, temple, wade, page, oak, supremacist, creek, sikh, hammerskin

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Miranda Leitsinger

Miguel Llanos

I'm the environment and weather editor for msnbc.com, and hope to discuss issues and events with the newsvine community as well as to invite experts into those discussions.

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