Chattanooga Times Free Press

Communitie­s mark 5 years since Superstorm Sandy

- BY FRANK ELTMAN

NEW YORK — Communitie­s across New York and New Jersey marked the fifth anniversar­y of Superstorm Sandy on Sunday, a day that ironically saw the region hit by another strong storm system containing soaking rains and strong winds.

“Of course Mother Nature is taking another shot at us today. She has a sick sense of humor,” Richard Thompson said Sunday while watching the rain fall at a convenienc­e store in Toms River, N.J. “This storm obviously won’t be anywhere near what Sandy was, but it would have been nicer to have a sunny day today.”

Thompson said his family’s summer home in the Mantolokin­g area was destroyed by Sandy, a meteorolog­ical hybrid “superstorm” created when a former hurricane merged with other systems. The home has been rebuilt, but the lengthy process of getting the work completed was “a nightmare. Just so many people and agencies involved,” Thompson said.

Sandy was blamed for at least 182 deaths in the U.S. and Caribbean and more than $71 billion in damage in this country alone. It swamped coastline communitie­s, knocked out power to millions of people and businesses, flooded parts of New York City’s transit system and set neighborho­ods ablaze.

As a light rain fell on the Rockaway Peninsula on Sunday, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio marked the anniversar­y in the waterfront neighborho­od.

“Five years later, it’s impossible to forget what

happened,” de Blasio said at a neighborho­od YMCA. “We’re talking about the worst natural disaster we have ever faced in this city.”

Many say there still are people struggling to repair and rebuild their homes. Rallies were being held from Asbury Park, N.J., to Lindenhurs­t, N.Y., by those hoping the damage doesn’t fade in the national psyche, especially in light of the recent spate of storms in Texas, Florida and the Caribbean.

“Families go through this hell every year around the anniversar­y,” said Michele Insinga, executive director of a Long Island-based nonprofit called “Adopt a House,” which advocates for Sandy victims still struggling to repair and rebuild their homes. “Then another 51 weeks goes by where no one is talking about it. We feel like Sandy is the forgotten storm.”

Insinga was among a coalition of Long Island activists who gathered near the shore Sunday, despite the severe weather, to keep the focus on recovery.

“Sandy is not over,” says Ryan Madden of the

Long Island Progressiv­e Coalition. “Long Islanders are still not in their homes; communitie­s are in need of vital infrastruc­ture and resiliency improvemen­ts; and New York State has not done enough to safeguard us from future climate impacts.”

In Asbury Park, the New Jersey shore town synonymous with Bruce Springstee­n, more than a dozen environmen­tal organizati­ons marked the anniversar­y by linking hands across the boardwalk and sharing stories of loss and recovery. Organizers said the event also laid out steps needed “to address climate change and save lives.”

Back in New York, the city of Long Beach, on Long Island, paid tribute to first responders and groups that assisted in the recovery. The entire barrier island community just east of New York City was swamped by the Atlantic Ocean during the storm. Its 2 1/2-mile boardwalk had to be completely rebuilt at a cost of $40 million, and the city has spent $122 million on other recovery efforts.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A person on the Brooklyn side of the East River faces the rain and clouds looming over lower Manhattan on the fifth anniversar­y of Superstorm Sandy in New York.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A person on the Brooklyn side of the East River faces the rain and clouds looming over lower Manhattan on the fifth anniversar­y of Superstorm Sandy in New York.

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