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New Yorkers in awe of storm’s power

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Officials said it would take at least three or four days to restore power, perhaps much longer, to the city. They also could not say when the subways — the arteries and veins that move this city of 8.3 million people — might run again. Even the officials seemed to be stunned at the storm’s fury, and the realization that all their preparations hadn’t been nearly enough.

“Last night was really frightening,” said Gov. Andrew Cuomo. He described watching the Hudson River pour into the vast construction pit at ground zero — the site of the former World Trade Center towers — and flood the automobile tunnel linking Manhattan and Brooklyn.

The recovery is “going to be a lot worse than we thought,” Cuomo said. “This is a long-term recovery and reconstruction effort.”

At least 18 people died in the city, and there were several near catastrophes. Several hospitals were forced to evacuate patients — including newborns cuddled in the arms of nurses — at the height of the storm when their backup power systems failed or were flooded.

With elevators out at New York University’s hospital, patients were carried on stretchers down long stairwells and loaded into dozens of ambulances that lined up in the dark and the rain.

A construction crane whose boom snapped early in the storm was left dangling more than 75 stories above Midtown Manhattan. Buildings nearby were evacuated and streets closed off. Somehow, the broken boom hung to the crane’s cab through the night, despite wind gusts that reached a reported 100 mph. It still hung there Tuesday.

On Breezy Point, a seaside neighborhood in Queens, a blaze roared out of control, leaping from home to home over the flooded streets. By Tuesday morning, more than 80 homes had been gutted by the fire, leaving charred ruins, sand mixing with ashes as waves crashed on the beach nearby.

“The winds were just devastating, blowing from one building to the next one,” said Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Bloomberg had ordered residents of Breezy Point and about 375,000 people in other low-lying areas to evacuate before the storm. The city set up more than 70 shelters to accommodate those with nowhere else to go.

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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