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Sandy’s death toll reaches 12; two N.Y. hospitals evacuated

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“This is a long-duration event,” said Rick Knabb, director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami.

The federal government announced that its offices would be closed again on Tuesday, and analysts warned that damage could top $10 billion.

In Midtown Manhattan, a crane attached to a luxury high-rise called One57 partially collapsed, and was dangling 1,000 feet above West 57th Street. One57 is scheduled to be New York City’s tallest building with residences; its penthouse sold last spring for $90 million. By Monday night, pieces of the crane began smashing some of the windows, sprinkling glass onto the street and forcing the evacuation of a nearby hotel.

“With the winds as they are, we cannot secure it,” Bloomberg said.

Hundreds of thousands of people had evacuated their homes — and many had declined.

With her apartment key dangling on a lanyard around her neck, Venus Jones Johnson trudged through a driving rain to a shelter at West Philadelphia High School in Pennsylvania. Johnson, 45, lives alone in a rented room.

“I kept hearing about this big disaster headed our way, so I figured I should find a better place,” said Johnson, her winter coat slick with rain.

Darryl Bradley, 44, said he had tried to stick it out at home last summer during Hurricane Irene, which killed more than 50 people — and collapsed part of Bradley’s ceiling.

“They say this one is going to be much bigger and much worse, and last a lot longer,” Bradley said after arriving at the shelter. “I barely survived Irene, so I’m not trying that again.”

Not everyone wanted to go. In New York, a small but steady stream of gawkers could not resist watching the harbor rise around them. At the waterfront in Brooklyn’s Red Hook neighborhood, Nicholas Martin sipped coffee and watched the water rippling in — up the side of a brick warehouse, around a telephone pole.

“I don’t think the flood is really going to get all the way to our apartment,” Martin said hopefully, and a bit tentatively. Down the street, three people could be seen throwing suitcases into the back of a pickup truck and driving off.

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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
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