Houston Chronicle

New Jersey:

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A boardwalk fire leaves Superstorm Sandy-hit area again in anguish.

SEASIDE PARK, N.J. — They were the kind of places that made for family memories of french fries and ice cream but also created some raucous reality TV, like the time Snooki was laid out by a barroom sucker punch.

They included an arcade where New Jersey’s governor played Skee Ball with his wife and kids, and a shop where he ate pizza (at least before his recent weight-loss surgery). There were three frozen custard shacks, games of chance, and stores where tourists could buy naughty T-shirts.

And now they’re gone, reduced to smoldering ruins by a spectacula­r fire that engulfed more than four blocks of a Jersey shore boardwalk that had been rebuilt just five months ago after being destroyed by Superstorm Sandy.

“We’re wiped out again. It’s just unimaginab­le,” said Daniel Shauger, manager of Funtown Arcade, which reopened June 1 — and struggled all summer — after Sandy’s floodwater­s ruined game machines and other equipment. Under investigat­ion

The cause of Thursday’s blaze was under investigat­ion, though prosecutor­s said they had seen no evidence it was suspicious.

Sending giant orange and red fireballs rolling 50 feet into the sky, the fire brought a painful sense of deja vu to the side-by-side communitie­s of Seaside Park and Seaside Heights, which rely on the boardwalk and beach for their economic survival.

Three police officers leaving the fire scene were injured Friday morning when they fell from an emergency vehicle; two suffered head injuries. Their injuries were not believed to be life-threatenin­g.

Gov. Chris Christie, as he did just after the Oct. 29 storm, vowed the two towns would rebuild.

“I will not permit all the work we’ve done over the last 10 months to be diminished or destroyed by what happened last night,” he said, standing across the street from a still-smoldering pizza shop and a gutted arcade that he used to patronize with his family.

He added: “We will make new memories, because that’s what we do.” Plan to rebuild

Christie said about 30 businesses were destroyed, although authoritie­s in the two towns said Thursday night more than 50 businesses had been wrecked, including 32 in Seaside Park and more than 20 in Seaside Heights.

Paul Schneider, who owns three small boardwalk stands, was stunned.

“Everything’s gone. I can’t believe this is happening again,” said Schneider, who had to rip out damaged electrical wiring and replace sodden merchandis­e after Sandy.

Seaside Park officials began planning Friday morning to rebuild their part of the boardwalk at the southern end, where the fire began near a frozen custard stand. Most of the boardwalk shared by the two towns was still intact.

Bob Martucci, the borough administra­tor, said it will cost $600,000 to rebuild the borough-owned boardwalk. Individual businesses would not be included in that cost, he said.

The Facebook page of one ruined business, a seafood restaurant, read simply “R.I.P.”

 ?? Julio Cortez / Associated Press ?? Fire officials arrange a hose onto a pickup truck Friday as smoke rises from the Funtown Pier in Seaside Park, N.J., the morning after a fire burned a portion of the boardwalk that was rebuilt just months ago.
Julio Cortez / Associated Press Fire officials arrange a hose onto a pickup truck Friday as smoke rises from the Funtown Pier in Seaside Park, N.J., the morning after a fire burned a portion of the boardwalk that was rebuilt just months ago.

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