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Councilman asks ‘where do you begin' when it comes to Seaside Heights recovery

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“I’m going to ask for any assistance I can get,” he said. “I don’t have anything but the clothes I’m wearing.”

Next door, Denise Crudup’s carpets squished with water when she stepped on them. She hadn’t been able to open her back door, swollen with seawater, for two days.

“I was just astonished,” said Crudup, who works as a nurse’s aide at a nursing home on the mainland.

Crudup’s landlord was submitting an insurance claim, she said, and she planned to apply for FEMA assistance.

“We have to replace all the appliances and furniture, pull the rug up, and the electrical sockets are wet,” she said. “But I’m alive. And this is material stuff. You can get that back.”

Atlantic City and Ventnor were still under a travel ban Thursday afternoon, but evacuated residents from Brigantine, Margate, and Longport were slowly returning to their homes. At sheriff’s checkpoints on the causeways, they were required to show valid ID and proof of residency to enter.

In Ventnor Heights, Tom Hewitt, his wife, and child found their house had been flooded. It’s uninhabitable for the foreseeable future.

“You can’t keep a 3-year-old in conditions like this,” he said.

Farther north along the Shore, the picture was grimmer.

On Long Beach Island, many roads remained impassable, and the island was not expected to reopen for another week.

And Seaside Heights, perhaps the most familiar Shore town these days thanks to MTV, turned into a international symbol of Sandy’s destruction as reporters toured the island this week.

Arcade owner Bob Stewart, 59, jokingly offered to show reporters the site of his office, now an empty spot of sand below what used to be the Funtown Pier.

“I had insurance, but after Irene, I figured the building was 125 years old, it wasn’t going anywhere,” he said Thursday. “I said, ‘Why am I paying $15,000 a month?’ Now I know.”

As Police Chief Tommy Boyd looked out over the twisted wreckage of one of the roller coasters lying in the ocean, he said the town had no plan yet how to get it out of the ocean. Other work would come first.

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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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