Hell and high water
- Published: 31 Oct 2012 at 00.06
- Online news: World
NEW YORK : New York City officials began assessing damage after superstorm Sandy killed 10 people, sparked a fire that razed 80 homes in a Queens, flooded tunnels of the biggest US transit system and left 750,000 customers without power, including the lower third of Manhattan.
The Dark Night: The New York City skyline was mostly blacked out by high winds and surging waves from superstorm Sandy. Across the northeastern US, 26 people were confirmed dead, and 7.5 million were beginning their second day without electricity."This was a devastating storm, maybe the worst New York City has ever experienced," tweeted Mayor Michael Bloomberg. "The impacts will be felt for some time.""Our state woke up today to absolute devastation," said Governor Chris Christie of next-door New Jersey state. "There are no words to describe what's been New Jersey's experience over the last 24 hours, and what we'll have to contend with over the coming days, weeks and months."For the second day in a row, all major stock markets were closed.The storm weakened as it moved further inland but forecasters still warned of gale-force winds and flooding along the densely-populated coast, where 7,400 National Guardsmen were mobilised in 11 states to provide emergency relief.Airlines scrapped one in five scheduled US flights Tuesday, after Sandy flooded New York's airports and spawned disruptions rivalling the toll from recent blizzards.The former hurricane, now termed a post-tropical cyclone, grounded 6,117 US flights, or 20 per cent of the day's total, according to data compiled by industry researcher FlightAware. All three of New York's main airports shut down for a second day on Tuesday, paralysing the nation's busiest air-travel market.Mayor Bloomberg said New York's subways may not open for five days. Governor Christie said restoring train service to Manhattan could take as long as 10 days.Crews began clearing downed trees and branches, and street cleaners scrubbed muck from roads. Power crews...
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