Anger rises as fuel shortages and difficulties in
reconnecting power hamper efforts to restore normality to US areas badly
hit by Storm Sandy.
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Sandy: Staten Island before and after New
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Climate: The latest election issue?
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In pictures: Power shortages
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'Journey from hell'
2 November 2012
Last updated at 15:51 GMT]
Meals and bottled water are being distributed to stranded residents in Lower Manhattan
Fuel
shortages and difficulties in restoring power are hampering efforts to
restore normality to parts of the US north-east in the wake of Storm
Sandy.
Fights broke out at petrol stations in New York and New
Jersey, and power suppliers warned some areas might not have electricity
until 11 November.
Anger is also rising in New York's Staten Island, with some residents saying they had been forgotten.
More than 90 deaths in the US have now been blamed on Sandy.
The cost of the storm to the US is now put at about $50bn (£31bn).
Meanwhile, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has endorsed President Barack Obama for next week's presidential election.
He said Storm Sandy had highlighted climate change issues, and that only one candidate saw that as an "urgent problem".
'Annihilated'
Residents and workers of areas affected by Sandy awoke on
Friday to continued problems of transportation, lack of electricity and a
dearth of fuel.
At many petrol stations there were long lines of cars and of people carrying jerry cans.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote
Remember that butterfly whose wing
beat in the Amazon causes a storm over the Atlantic? I think she is
hovering over the election right now”
School worker Andre Harrison told
the BBC he woke early on Friday to queue in the south-western New York
City borough of Staten Island.
"I got here about two hours ago, but the gas station has
apparently said they're not going to open until there is a police
presence. I heard there were riots here yesterday," he said.
"The first person who is in the queue got here five hours before me."
One owner of a fuel station in New Jersey told the New York
Times he had been pumping petrol for 36 hours. He said he had to call
the police and turn off the pumps temporarily as tempers among customers
rose.
There were reports of sharp price increases by some suppliers.
Well over half of petrol stations in New Jersey and in New York City remain closed.
Power officials hope to restore electricity to all of
Manhattan and more areas on Brooklyn by Saturday, with more underground
lines opening.
Trains remain free on Friday and a ban on cars with fewer than three people inside will stay in place in Manhattan.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote
If they take one first responder from Staten Island to cover this marathon, I will scream”
James Oddo
Councilman
But utility companies reported
that 1.3 million customers in New York and 1.4 million in New Jersey
were still cut off as of Friday morning, Reuters reported.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said in a letter to power
companies that he would "take appropriate action against those utilities
and their management if they do not meet their obligations to New
Yorkers in this time of crisis."
Consolidated Edison, the power company serving New York,
warned that some areas of the city would be blacked out until 11
November.
New York West Village resident Rosemarie Zurlo told
Associated Press she was abandoning her flat temporarily and heading to
Brooklyn: "I'm leaving because I'm freezing. My apartment is ice cold.
Everybody's tired of it."
Time-lapse footage shows Sandy's passage over New York City - Footage courtesy New York Times
'Forgotten'
Some 19 people are now known to have died in Staten Island.
The storm swamped the low-lying district with tidal surges, lifting whole houses off their foundations.
The bodies of two boys, aged two and four, who were torn from
their mothers' arms by rushing floodwaters, were recovered in a marsh
on Thursday.
Announcing the discovery of the boys' bodies, New York Police
Commissioner Ray Kelly said it was "terrible, absolutely terrible".
"It just compounds all the tragic aspects of this horrific event," Mr Kelly added.
Anger is also rising in Staten Island at the delay in
bringing aid, with litter piling up and residents picking through the
debris of storm-ravaged homes.
James Molinaro, the borough's president, complained the American Red Cross was "nowhere to be found".
Marcia Sikowitz: "I had three sons, now I have two"
He said: "We have hundreds of people in shelters. Many of them,
when the shelters close, have nowhere to go because their homes are
destroyed. These are not homeless people. They're homeless now."
One resident, Theresa Connor, told Reuters her neighbourhood had been "annihilated".
"They forgot about us... And Bloomberg said New York is fine. The marathon is on."
Reflecting the anger of some at Mr Bloomberg's insistence
that Sunday's New York Marathon will go ahead, councilman James Oddo
said: "If they take one first responder from Staten Island to cover this
marathon, I will scream."
Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano and a senior
Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) official, Richard Serino,
will visit the borough on Friday.
Mr Bloomberg defended the decision to hold the race, saying: "This city is a city where we have to go on."
National Guardsmen and community groups are being deployed in
New York and New Jersey amid mounting fears for elderly residents
stranded in their homes.
Aid worker Monique George told AP: "In some cases, they
hadn't talked to folks in a few days. They haven't even seen anybody
because the neighbours evacuated."
In Hoboken, New Jersey, some 20,000 people are still trapped in their homes as floodwaters slowly recede.
Officials warned residents not to walk in water polluted with sewage and chemicals.
Sandy arrived on the US Atlantic coast on Monday night, bringing hurricane-strength winds, flooding and blackouts.
The number of dead in the US now exceeds the toll from the Caribbean, where 69 people were killed by Sandy.
Meanwhile, campaigning for Tuesday's US presidential election - suspended earlier in the week - has fully resumed.
In the final jobs report before election day, the US
Department of Labor said the economy created 171,000 new jobs in October
and unemployment rose slightly to 7.9%.
In an extremely close race, Mr Obama and Republican
challenger Mitt Romney are engaged in a final push for votes,
particularly in eight battleground states. COPY http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-
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