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FEMA springs into action in storm-ravaged New Jersey

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Touring flood-damaged Sayreville in Middlesex County on Wednesday morning, Christie assured residents FEMA offices soon would be open in their neighborhood and in others hard hit by Sandy.

When some residents complained that FEMA had not treated them appropriately after Hurricane Irene hit last year, Christie said: “Don’t you worry about it. I’ll be with the president this afternoon, and the head of FEMA.”

A disabled great-grandmother, Dolores Beaton, 62, asked Christie to go into her home. He took her hand and led her through a huge puddle up onto her porch. Inside, furniture was toppled over and the house smelled like mildew. Wet bills were lying on a table. She said the recliner that she sleeps on had been ruined.

“Everything’s gone,” she said. “I can’t replace anything. I have no money.”

Christie told her he would make sure FEMA opened an office in Middlesex County to get her the help she needed.

Storm victims can apply for FEMA assistance by phone, on the Web, or by smartphone:

FEMA also will set up disaster-recovery centers where applicants can go for assistance information. The locations for those centers will be determined soon, Behnke said.

FEMA assistance is not to duplicate private insurance, and residents are expected to file appropriate claims with their insurance carriers, Behnke said.

The process of getting federal aid may be long, said Philadelphia lawyer Marc Tepper, an expert in insurance law who represented the government of the U.S. Virgin Islands in FEMA claims after Hurricane Marilyn in 1995.

Patience is key in dealing with FEMA, as reimbursements may take weeks or months, and initial assessments can be lower or higher than eventual payouts, said Tepper, of Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney.

FEMA notes that its disaster assistance “is meant to help you with critical expenses that cannot be covered in other ways. This assistance is not intended to restore your damaged property to its condition before the disaster.”

The maximum for a FEMA grant for individuals and households is $31,900.

After a resident applies for assistance, a FEMA inspector will be assigned to assess damage and determine what assistance the resident qualifies for. Then a check can be issued, or in the case of business owners, a referral made to the Small Business Administration for low-interest loan assistance.

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