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Sandy leaves devastation in its wake as East Coast looks for relief

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Those who managed to reach the gas station had dodged fallen trees, downed power lines and flooded roads. They left behind darkened homes, a few of them crushed by falling trees. Roads were a jumble of yellow police tape, tree trunks and instant lakes of churning brown water that cut some towns in half. Hundreds of people were out in the streets, in cars and on foot, searching for food, ice, water or gasoline.

“It’s been crazy,” said Scott Macaluso, a cashier at the nearby Stop & Shop. “Everybody’s desperate for milk, water, eggs, ice — all the basics. ... Nobody has any idea when the power will be back on. All we can do is try to stay open as long as we can.”

In New York, Joel Gordin, 57, is a part-owner of the Cowgirl Seahorse restaurant. He woke up Tuesday desperate to know how the restaurant, near the southern tip of Manhattan, had fared in the storm. He rode his bike across the Brooklyn Bridge to see — and found that flood waters had tossed the place so severely that it appeared as though someone had shaken the building like a snow globe.

“Nothing was where it should have been,” he said. “I was devastated by it.”

“I’ve never seen my husband cry,” said his wife, Emily Sachar. “That was something. I guess it was just all the elbow grease he put into that place.”

Christie, too, was overcome with emotion after viewing the waterfront damage. He saw submerged homes and boats piled on top of each other like toys, and called the devastation “unthinkable.”

“I was just here walking this place this summer. The fact most of it is gone is just incredible,” he told the mayor of Belmar, N.J., Matt Doherty.

The misery will be extended by the blow Sandy delivered to the region’s infrastructure.

In New York, officials said the storm posed the greatest threat in the subway system’s 108 years. Flooding, they said, might have destroyed equipment, rail lines and power sources. The subway system, which ferries 5 million people a day, might not be running again until this weekend, officials said.

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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