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Hurricane Sandy smashes part of Atlantic City’s Boardwalk

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The flooding in the downbeach communities of Ventnor, Margate and Longport was substantial, as bad as anybody could remember, with many streets under several feet of water, and houses along the back bays surrounded by water several feet high.

The ocean met the bay in parts of Longport, the narrowest part of the island, and Ventnor Heights was under water from midmorning on. Water rose several feet around the familiar Wawa stores. Spots that always flood — the point in Longport, Ventnor Heights — were inundated even worse. And places that almost never flood — Ventnor Avenue in Ventnor, some higher-elevation beach blocks — were submerged at high tide.

In Ventnor Heights, unmoored Hobie Cats were floating down the beach, and newly installed dune fencing was washed away by the crashing surf.

“I had people call me at 2 a.m. hysterical, saying they wanted to leave,” said Emergency Management Director William Melfi.

In Brigantine, where many of the island’s 9,500 residents had stayed, the golf course and streets were flooded.

And in North Wildwood, first responders had to wade down the streets during rescue operations.

Sandy also affected rail travelers. Amtrak service was suspended through Tuesday while SEPTA and PATCO hoped to restore some service by Tuesday afternoon.

Motorists faced challenges, too. The Garden State Parkway was closed south of Exit 129 in Woodbridge Township because of flooding, and more “significant closures” were being considered on both the Parkway and the New Jersey Turnpike, New Jersey officials said. Part of the Turnpike from Exit 7A to 8 was closed.

All traffic was banned late Monday from the Delaware River Port Authority bridges (the Commodore Barry, Walt Whitman, Ben Franklin and Betsy Ross Bridges), and the Tacony-Palmyra and Burlington-Bristol Bridges.

Along Big Timber Creek in Bellmawr, residents watched water levels rise, then shrink with the cycle of tides.

“Around 7 a.m. it was really bad. The river was coming up right over the road, but it’s all receded now,” said Steve Rymsza, 60. “We’ll see what happens when high tide hits again.”

Many roads across Camden County were flooded. Kaighns Avenue and several blocks of River Road were closed in Camden along with westbound Route 38 in Cherry Hill and Route 70 at Springdale Road due to downed poles.

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Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all