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Jersey residents try to cope with devastation

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Plenty of water covers some of the streets of Wildwood, New Jersey, October 30, 2012, a day after Hurricane Sandy blew across the area. (Photo by Clem Murray/Philadelphia Inquirer/MCT)

(MCT) — PHILADELPHIA—Two days after Sandy sent the ocean surging across Long Beach Island, those who stayed behind looked out over the wreckage in shock.

Sylvia Sorino, a waitress at a hotel, went back to the ground-floor apartment she shared with her boyfriend and wept.

“Look at this place. All this stuff is wrecked. Our whole lives are in here, and it’s gone. We don’t have insurance,” the 53-year-old said Wednesday. “I ran out of here with the clothes on my back.”

In the aftermath of the storm, authorities and residents alike tried to come to grips with a scene unlike any they had ever seen. Drifts of sand lay where roads once were. A small watercraft perched atop a fence. The contents of multimillion-dollar beachfront homes were strewn across neighbors’ yards.

A low-lying barrier island prone to flooding even in mild storms, LBI was among the hardest-hit locations on the Jersey Shore — to the point that the best estimate on reopening its link to the mainland is at least a week.

“It’s carnage,” Long Beach Township Mayor Michael Mancini said. “This is going to be a very long cleanup.”

President Barack Obama and Gov. Chris Christie toured some of the most damaged areas Wednesday and promised immediate help. All along New Jersey’s 127-mile coast, property owners pushed for access as officials worked to ensure areas were safe.

Beyond the property damage to homes, cars, and boats, a number of towns were dealing with gas leaks posing a fire danger, roads made impassable because of piles of sand — and, on LBI, 750 people who rode out the storm and refused to leave.

National Guard troops, who arrived Tuesday, were going door to door telling people still there that when electricity and water would return was anyone’s guess.

“Our guys are telling them, we can’t guarantee your safety,” Lt. Eric Shaw said. “There are a lot of gas leaks down at the southern end. It’s very dangerous.”

In Brick, in northern Ocean County, emergency crews had trouble reaching multiple homes Wednesday that caught fire after gas lines ruptured.

Mancini said a representative for New Jersey Natural Gas told officials that the utility could not shut down the main, which forced a house-by-house approach.

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Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

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