It has been 198 and counting since the storm with no federal disaster relief bill. For comparison, the bill for Hurricane Katrina was passed in 19 days post-storm. Most municipalities have a debris clean up bill is larger than their annual budget. We have about 7-8x the amount of debris in a few counties than Hurricane Irma did in 54-ish counties in 2017 as it went up the entire Florida peninsula.
A couple other stats...
4th strongest storm to ever make U.S. landfall in terms of wind speed (3rd by pressure)
Estimated $25 billion in damage
What many forget is how quickly this storm built up. It was a tropical depression on 7 Oct, hurricane strength on 8 Oct, major hurricane on 9 Oct, landfall as a Category 5 on 10 Oct. That is just insane how quickly it strengthened.
Sorry for the rant. I will get off the soapbox. It can be very frustrating dealing with this every day and hearing how everyone is struggling in some fashion. Don't even get me started on insurance companies.?
So the buzz from hurricane Sandy was after Katrina hit New Orleans there was massive money flowing to help but it went into pockets of greedy people and didn't end up were it should have so now the money flow is watched like a hawk a few bad apples wreck it for everyone . I know first hand what these storms do and the financial mess
Some Stats on Sandy hope you are back to normal as soon as possible . The last paragraph is crazy NY city suing oil companies
•••
By
Kimberly Amadeo
Updated September 22, 2018
Hurricane Sandy hit New Jersey on October 29, 2012. It did
$70.2 billion in economic damage. This figure has been adjusted for inflation. It was the
fourth-worst storm in U.S. history. It had been a Category 3 storm. But by the time it made landfall, it was downgraded to a tropical storm.
The
storm damaged or destroyed at least 650,000 homes, and 8 million customers lost power. Storm surges were massive: 8 1/2 feet higher than normal at Sandy Hook, New Jersey and 12 1/2 feet at Kings Point, Long Island.
Sandy closed the
New York Stock Exchange for the first time in 27 years since Hurricane Gloria. Even the electronic exchanges, based in New Jersey, were closed so as not to endanger the workers there. The
exchanges were also closed on Tuesday, the first two-day closure due to weather since 1888.
On January 10, 2018,
New York City sued the major oil companies for their role in damages brought by Hurricane Sandy. It seeks to compensate the city for its costs related to
climate change. It claims the companies covered-up the role their product had on
global warming. The
increased damage from hurricanes is one consequence of higher ocean temperatures.