Gas ration starts as NYC struggles in Sandy wake
NEW York City started rationing gas yesterday as tempers remained short, lines stayed long and panic buying continued more than 10 days after a deadly superstorm stunned the city's infrastructure.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the shortages could last another couple of weeks and that only a quarter of the city's gas stations were open. Some had no power, and others couldn't get fuel from terminals.
"This is designed to let everybody have a fair chance," Bloomberg said of the new system based on even-numbered and odd-numbered license plates.
Superstorm Sandy killed more than 100 people in several states, most of them in New York and New Jersey, and its damage has been estimated at up to US$50 billion. That makes it the second-most expensive storm in US history, behind Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
In another reminder of Katrina, the Federal Emergency Management Agency said on Thursday that it had started to move several hundred mobile homes into New York and New Jersey for the thousands who have to leave their damaged homes as winter weather arrives. FEMA was widely criticized for using trailers after Katrina devastated New Orleans when many were found to contain toxic levels of formaldehyde. FEMA says the mobile homes being brought to the New York area are different.
The Energy Department has said the superstorm also left more people in the dark than any other storm in US history. At the peak, more than 8.5 million homes and businesses across 21 states lost power.
Hundreds of thousands of customers, mostly in New York and New Jersey, were still waiting yesterday for their electricity to come back on. An angry New York Governor Andrew Cuomo blasted the local utilities as unprepared and badly managed.
"It's unacceptable the longer it goes on because the longer it goes on, people's suffering is worse," he said.
A new, weaker storm on Wednesday dropped a layer of wet snow and knocked out power to more than 200,000 customers in New York and New Jersey, erasing some of the progress made by utility crews.
Early yesterday, there were more than 288,000 outages in New York and about 265,000 in New Jersey.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the shortages could last another couple of weeks and that only a quarter of the city's gas stations were open. Some had no power, and others couldn't get fuel from terminals.
"This is designed to let everybody have a fair chance," Bloomberg said of the new system based on even-numbered and odd-numbered license plates.
Superstorm Sandy killed more than 100 people in several states, most of them in New York and New Jersey, and its damage has been estimated at up to US$50 billion. That makes it the second-most expensive storm in US history, behind Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
In another reminder of Katrina, the Federal Emergency Management Agency said on Thursday that it had started to move several hundred mobile homes into New York and New Jersey for the thousands who have to leave their damaged homes as winter weather arrives. FEMA was widely criticized for using trailers after Katrina devastated New Orleans when many were found to contain toxic levels of formaldehyde. FEMA says the mobile homes being brought to the New York area are different.
The Energy Department has said the superstorm also left more people in the dark than any other storm in US history. At the peak, more than 8.5 million homes and businesses across 21 states lost power.
Hundreds of thousands of customers, mostly in New York and New Jersey, were still waiting yesterday for their electricity to come back on. An angry New York Governor Andrew Cuomo blasted the local utilities as unprepared and badly managed.
"It's unacceptable the longer it goes on because the longer it goes on, people's suffering is worse," he said.
A new, weaker storm on Wednesday dropped a layer of wet snow and knocked out power to more than 200,000 customers in New York and New Jersey, erasing some of the progress made by utility crews.
Early yesterday, there were more than 288,000 outages in New York and about 265,000 in New Jersey.
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