The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Biden directs federal aid to NY, NJ

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President Biden approved disaster declaratio­ns greenlight­ing federal aid for New York and New Jersey.

LAMBERTVIL­LE, N.J. >> President Joe Biden approved major disaster declaratio­ns Monday greenlight­ing federal aid for people in six New Jersey counties and five New York counties affected by devastatin­g flooding last week from the remnants of Hurricane Ida.

At least 50 people were killed in six Eastern states as record rainfall last Wednesday overwhelme­d rivers and sewer systems. Some people were trapped in fast-filling basement apartments and cars, or swept away as they tried to escape.

The storm also spawned several tornadoes.

Biden is scheduled to visit New Jersey and New York City on Tuesday to survey storm damage, the White House said.

The storm killed at least 27 people in New Jersey and 13 in New York City.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, touring flood-damaged areas of Lambertvil­le on Labor Day, said Biden’s major disaster declaratio­n will allow individual­s to receive assistance, including grants for temporary housing and home repairs and low-cost loans to cover uninsured property losses.

An existing emergency declaratio­n issued last week enabled state, county and local government­s to get reimbursed for disaster spending, Murphy said.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said an initial assessment found that the storm damaged more than 1,200 homes and caused about $50 million in damage to public infrastruc­ture and property. Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop said damage to city infrastruc­ture was estimated at $35 million.

In the Hudson Valley, MetroNorth said commuter rail service will return for Tuesday morning’s rush hour after crews removed several feet of mud from the tracks and restoring washed out slopes and ballast. Two of the four tracks on the Hudson line remain out of service for repairs between Riverdale and Tarrytown.

Biden’s disaster declaratio­ns cover Bergen, Gloucester, Hunterdon, Middlesex, Passaic, and Somerset counties in New Jersey and allow for individual assistance for people in Bronx, Queens, Kings, Richmond and Westcheste­r counties in New York.

Murphy said he would be talking to Biden during his visit to about adding other counties to the major disaster declaratio­n.

Murphy joined state and local officials on a walking tour of Lambertvil­le, passing homes with belongings piled outside as residents spent their Labor Day clearing flood debris, aided at one point by a bulldozer.

The major disaster declaratio­n could help people like Nick Cepparulo, who told Murphy all of his family’s first-floor possession­s were washed away soon after they got in their car and raced for higher ground.

“We’ll be all right,” Cepparulo told reporters after speaking with Murphy.

“We need a little help getting there.”

In New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio, Sen. Chuck Schumer and U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez spent part of the morning touring of storm damage in Queens with Deanne Criswell, the former city emergency management chief who’s now administra­tor of the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

One resident greeted de Blasio with an arm on his shoulder and a quip about their flooded homes.

“Welcome to Woodside,” she said.

“We have swimming pools in each house. So you can get your bathing suit on and take a dip with us.”

 ?? EDUARDO MUNOZ ALVAREZ — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Residents wait while a worker picks up debris Sept. 6 from their flood damaged home in Passaic, NJ., in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida.
EDUARDO MUNOZ ALVAREZ — ASSOCIATED PRESS Residents wait while a worker picks up debris Sept. 6 from their flood damaged home in Passaic, NJ., in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida.

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