New York Post

Cooking without gas

Latest NYCHA trouble

- By REUVEN FENTON and NOLAN HICKS

Dozens of apartments at a public-housing complex in the Rockaways lost gas service last week — and officials at the hapless New York City Housing Authority say it could take up to two months to get it back.

Residents in 68 units of the Ocean Bay developmen­t in Arverne, Queens, were given single-pot hot plates to cook meals after a crew of diggers struck a gas pipe, officials said.

After a week of making do, tenants are frustrated and angry.

“I’m a diabetic. I have blood pressure, asthma and all that,” said Doris Terry, 69.

“It’s like, who’s got the money to go out every day to buy something to eat? I don’t, ’cause I’m on a fixed income. Cooking one thing at a time doesn’t cut it. A lot of people like me like their food hot. But what can we do? We can’t do nothing.”

The gas went off last Thursday and it will take until “late August” to get it restored, a NYCHA spokeswoma­n told The Post. She said the agency moved quickly to provide the hot plates and organized a meeting to keep residents informed.

The affected units house 126 people, officials said.

Residents said the agency should have acted years ago to replace the pipe that was acci- dentally ruptured last week.

“Somebody hit a gas pipe downstairs when they were shoveling the dirt, and I guess it was an old pipe that needed to be repaired,” one resident told The Post. “They said the pipe was so old, it should have been replaced a long time ago.”

“We couldn’t turn on the gas at all. There’s nothing that we can do about it. We just have to use a f--king hot plate. It’s ridiculous.”

The NYCHA spokeswoma­n confirmed the “gas was affected during excavation on the grounds” and pinned the lengthy repair timeline on the need for additional inspection­s, possible asbestos removal and safety reviews.

A notice posted at the developmen­t apologized to residents for “the inconvenie­nce.”

But for many residents, the loss of their stoves has been far more than inconvenie­nt.

“We can’t eat anything unless we cook it in our microwave or toaster oven. So we’re very limited,” said Jennifer Grullon, 26. “I’m a diabetic, and most things that are microwavab­le aren’t really good for me.”

 ??  ?? STOVELESS: Doris Terry, who lives in the Ocean Bay developmen­t (inset) in the Rockaways, can do her cooking only on a hot plate after a crew busted the gas line, which won’t be fixed until late August.
STOVELESS: Doris Terry, who lives in the Ocean Bay developmen­t (inset) in the Rockaways, can do her cooking only on a hot plate after a crew busted the gas line, which won’t be fixed until late August.

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